
US District Court Judge Katherine Failla has ruled that the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) can proceed with its case against Coinbase.
The SEC filed a lawsuit against the Coinbase cryptocurrency exchange in June last year. In the lawsuit, the securities regulator alleged that Coinbase operated as an unregistered broker, exchange, and clearing agency.
The court has agreed to these charges filed by the SEC, saying the regulator had sufficiently pleaded the accusation. It also stated that the Staking Program offered by Coinbase constituted an unregistered offer and sale of securities.
Court Dismisses Coinbase Motion to Drop the Case
The SEC filed charges against Coinbase in June last year. The regulator said that Coinbase listed 13 tokens deemed to be securities. However, Coinbase refuted the charges and filed an order to dismiss the case.
In its dismissal motion, Coinbase challenged the SEC’s authority over cryptocurrency exchanges. It also argued that the transactions fulfilled on the exchange could not be classified as financial securities, which fell outside the SEC’s regulatory purview.
According to the SEC, some transactions performed on Coinbase could constitute investment contracts under federal securities laws. The court agreed with this argument.
“As explained herein, the ‘crypto’ nomenclature may be of recent vintage, but the challenged transactions fall comfortably within the framework that courts have used to identify securities for nearly eight years,” the court said.
The court also appeared to agree with the SEC that Coinbase was at fault for failing to register with the regulator.
This failure to register only proved that the SEC was right in its claim that the exchange operated as an unregistered securities exchange and broker.
Coinbase and the SEC have been given until April 109 to submit a proposed case management plan to the court.
SEC Case Against Coinbase Wallet Dismissed
The SEC appeared to agree with most of the claims made against Coinbase but not all of them. It dismissed the claims made by the SEC against the Coinbase wallet, which has been deemed a major win for self-custody by Coinbase’s CEO, Brian Armstrong.
Judge Failla opined that the arguments made by the SEC against the Coinbase Wallet failed to demonstrate that the exchange operated as a broker by making the wallet available to its customers.
The Chief Legal Officer at Coinbase, Paul Grewal, opined that the case would play a crucial role in understanding the SEC’s internal views on cryptocurrencies and the discussions surrounding cryptocurrency regulations. However, he remained confident that the exchange could win the lawsuit.
Grewal has also called upon the US Congress to hasten the creation of comprehensive digital assets legislation. He noted that regulatory clarity was necessary to retain innovation in the United States.
The SEC has previously been accused of regulating the cryptocurrency industry through enforcement. The regulator has filed charges against some of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges, including Binance and, most recently, KuCoin.