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The SEC's interlocutory appeal comes nearly a month after Judge Analisa Torres laid out her non-final ruling.
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a letter of intent to request an interlocutory appeal to Judge Analisa Torres’ July 13th summary judgment in its ongoing legal battle against Ripple Labs.
In an Aug. 9 letter to Judge Torres, the SEC explained it believed her decision warrants a fresh look by an appellate court.
“Interlocutory review is warranted here. These two issues involve controlling questions of law on which there is substantial ground for differences of opinion as reflected by an intra-district split that has already developed," the SEC wrote.
The SEC added a "timely appellate review' is warranted given the number of actions currently pending that may be affected by how the Court of Appeals resolves the issues at hand.
The filing comes nearly a month after Ripple scored a partial victory over the regulator over the legal classification of XRP (XRP).
This is a developing story, and further information will be added as it becomes available.
Ripple President Monica Long says the recent outcome of the company’s legal battle with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has given the payment firm “clarity” on how it can operate its business in the future. The SEC first sued Ripple in late 2020 for allegedly selling XRP as an unregistered security. Last month, […]
The post Ripple Is ‘Re-Engaging’ With the US Market After Partial Victory Over SEC in the XRP Lawsuit: Company President appeared first on The Daily Hodl.
The crypto community has gathered to celebrate the recent ruling on XRP's securities status, but lawyers warn there's more to it than meets the eye.
Ripple Labs’ split-decision victory against the United States securities regulator is being seen as a significant blow to the regulator’s “war on crypto,” however, crypto lawyers warn it isn't a definitive victory for the industry or the firm y
In a landmark ruling on July 13, Judge Torres determined that XRP (XRP) is not a security — at least when sold to the general public.
The decision was met with a joyous uproar from XRP token holders and came with a massive surge in the token's price, with industry heavyweights lauding the decision as likely to aid crypto exchanges Coinbase and Binance in their respective lawsuits.
Luke Martin, the founder of crypto investment firm Venture Coinist noted that the “core component” of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) claim in its suits against Binance and Coinbase is that they offered the sale of unregistered securities on their platforms.
After losing on this matter in the case of XRP, Martin believes this will serve as a substantial blow to the SEC and its chair, Gary Gensler.
He called the decision “inconceivably bullish” for the industry:
This Ripple news is larger than XRP...
— Luke Martin (@VentureCoinist) July 13, 2023
Remember when the SEC went on an all-out attack versus crypto a few months ago?
•Suing Binance for breaking securities rules
•Suing Coinbase for breaking securities rules
•Targeting 10-15 large altcoins as securities
Classifying tokens…
Pro-XRP lawyer John Deaton shared a similar sentiment, stating that Coinbase was the other “winner” from the ruling and that altcoins would stand to benefit.
Similarly, Tyler Winklevoss, the CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Gemini, said the ruling “decimates” the SEC’s case against Coinbase. His twin brother, Cameron Winklevoss referred to the ruling as a “watershed moment” that will make it difficult for the SEC to claim authority over cryptocurrencies.
The Ripple ruling today decimates the @SECGov's case against @coinbase. Have fun with that one @GaryGensler. https://t.co/2lfFXxX2Xf
— Tyler Winklevoss (@tyler) July 13, 2023
Coinbase, Kraken and iTrustShares have already relisted XRP on their respective platforms following the decision.
Despite the positive outcome for XRP, several digital asset lawyers warned against celebrating too soon.
Law firm partner Stephen Palley of Brown Rudnick noted that the summary judgement is only “partial” and that the ruling by Judge Torres isn’t legally binding — instead, it may only serve as persuasive commentary for future courts to follow if they so choose.
A word of caution: that order in the Ripple case is a partial summary judgment from a single district court judge.
— Palley (@stephendpalley) July 13, 2023
While persuasive, it's not binding precedent on other courts and will likely be appealed and could be reversed
don't yolo into anything based on that decision
Palley and others noted that there’s also the chance the SEC may appeal the decision, which presents the possibility that a higher court overturns the rulings made by Judge Torres.
Related: Bad news for Ripple? LBRY judge passes ruling on if secondary crypto sales are securities
Ripple will also need to deal with the SEC’s claim that Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and co-founder Chris Larsen “aided and abetted” the institutional sale of XRP, says U.S. lawyer James “MetaLawMan” Murphy.
Based on my quick read through, it looks like the only thing left for trial would be the claim that Larsen and Garlinghouse "aided and abetted" Ripple's Institutional Sales of XRP--which were the only sales the court found to violate the law. https://t.co/mi7i4Diy9j
— MetaLawMan (@MetaLawMan) July 13, 2023
The SEC alleged $728 million worth of XRP was sold from institutional sales.
United States-based commercial litigator Joe Carlasare ripped Garlinghouse on this point, asserting that Ripple “made $700 million in unlawful profit.”
No, the most important part of the ruling is the Court found that your company broke the law and made illegal institutional sales.
— Joe Carlasare (@JoeCarlasare) July 13, 2023
Your company made $700 million in unlawful profit. Good luck at trial claiming ignorance of Howey https://t.co/qSWEt34yFD
This claim was set aside by Judge Torres, and will likely be contested at trial.
Magazine: Crypto regulation — Does SEC Chair Gary Gensler have the final say?