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SEC vs Ripple Lawsuit Has Become ‘Cold'

Posted by Jeffrey Sloe on July 07, 2021 - 9:42pm

SEC vs Ripple Lawsuit Has Become ‘Cold’ — Analyst Suggests It Could Henceforth Continue Behind Closed Doors

By Brenda Ngari - July 7, 2021

The legal battle between the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and crypto payment firm Ripple is taking a bit longer than expected. And if you’ve been paying attention, you will realize that no news has been shared with the XRP community in recent weeks.

In a tweet on July 6, analyst Martin Valk proposed that the case has become “a bit cold”. He tagged some lawyers in the XRP community, James Filan and Jeremy Hogan, and also the founder and host of CryptoLaw John E. Deaton. Specifically, Valk pondered when the XRP community is likely to hear from the judge or does the silence basically means the lawsuit will continue behind closed doors from now on.

Hogan responded, noting that the case has been a lull for the community but depositions are taking place and documents being moved around in recent weeks — Ripple enthusiasts are just not aware of what is going on behind the scenes. In fact, he believes CEO Brad Garlinghouse has already been deposed.

Meanwhile, another observer pointed to James Filan’s Twitter page and his pinned tweet. The tweet in question captions a table of the scheduled events in the Ripple suit. It shows that the fact discovery deadline is slated for August 31, 2021, while the expert discovery deadline is set for October 15.

When Will The Lawsuit End?

The bombshell lawsuit, which the U.S. regulator filed against Ripple in late December, alleged that the blockchain firm, CEO Brad Garlinghouse, and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen raised over $1.3 billion in seven years by selling the XRP cryptocurrency in an unregistered securities offering. Ripple and its top executives have ferociously denied these allegations and want the case wrapped up as soon as possible.

But as ZyCrypto reported previously, without a settlement, the case will likely be resolved in early 2022. That being said, Ripple still has plans to run an IPO despite the inconvenience of the lawsuit. Speaking during Consensus 2021, Garlinghouse indicated that the company plans to go public after the lawsuit comes to an end.

In the meantime, Ripple has welcomed two more lawyers to the legal team, Sarah J. Prostko, and Nicole Tatz, to defend Larsen and Garlinghouse respectively.

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DISCLAIMER: None Of The Information You Read On ZyCrypto Should Be Regarded As Investment Advice. Cryptocurrencies Are Highly Volatile, Conduct Your Own Research Before Making Any Investment Decisions.

The original article written by David Kariuki and posted on ZyCrypto.com.

Article reposted on Markethive by Jeffrey Sloe

Jeffrey Sloe Thanks for reading and commenting Corneliu.
July 10, 2021 at 12:30am
Corneliu Boghian Thanks for sharing
July 9, 2021 at 3:23am
Jeffrey Sloe I agree Bill. Thank you for reading and commenting Brian, Simon, Bill and Oner
July 9, 2021 at 12:01am
Oleg Ch thanks for sharing
July 8, 2021 at 6:39pm
Bill Rippel It’s time they dropped the lawsuit and moved on. It’s been dragging on way too long.
July 8, 2021 at 1:42pm
Simon Keighley Ripple's lawsuit seems to have being going on for ages - thanks for the update, Jeffrey.
July 8, 2021 at 10:02am