In the Ripple-SEC case, which revolves around the assertion that executives knowingly sold an unregistered security, XRP holders have been attempting to insert themselves into the legal struggle for some time. The regulator would rather duke it out with the Ripple executives alone. However, in an official ruling, Manhattan District Court Judge Analisa Torres wrote that the court should be allowed to hear the “meaningful perspective” of XRP holders.
Torres’ assertion came despite SEC claims in an official attempt to halt the intervention that the XRP token holders “cannot offer any unique perspective or information that is not already available to the court, either in the public record or through the presentation of the [executives’] counsel.”
The lawyer representing a group of XRP holders was in a celebratory mood on Twitter.
Although Torres stated that the holders could not “intervene as a class,” as this would cause delay, she added [citing legal precedent] that “they will provide the court with a meaningful perspective, and will help ensure [the] ‘complete and plenary presentation of difficult issues so that the court may reach a proper decision.’”
She ruled that the holders “shall be allowed to assist the court by briefing legal issues relevant to the case as approved in advance by the court.”
However, although the judge wrote that amicus status would allow the XRP holders “to assist with ‘significant legal issues,’” she expressed the view that the court would be “acknowledging the [group]’s ‘highly partisan position.’”
At 07:48 UTC, XRP, ranked 7th by market capitalization, trades at USD 1.05 and is up by almost 2% in a day and 14% in a week.
Meanwhile, the SEC also appears undaunted in its pursuit of another major American crypto player, namely Circle.
In a filing to the SEC, Circle revealed that it had actually received an “investigative subpoena” from the regulator’s Enforcement Division back in July this year, asking it to provide “documents and information.”
The company wrote:
“In July 2021, we received an investigative subpoena from the SEC Enforcement Division requesting documents and information regarding certain of our holdings, customer programs and operations. We are cooperating fully with their investigation.”
Some media outlets have pointed out that Circle made a similar admission in a document back in August, although this section appears to have been overlooked by most at the time.
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Learn more:
– XRP to Resume Trading on Japanese Exchange, Ripple-SEC War Continues
– USDC Issuer Circle Set to Turn Into Full-Reserve National Commercial Bank
– USDC Operator Happy After Yellen Calls Stablecoins ‘National Security’ Concern
– Regulator is Like a ‘Bulldozer’ but Crypto is ‘Resistant to State Control’