Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said in an interview that as the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) drops its lawsuit against Coinbase for operating an illegal trading platform, the company will free up $50 million and invest more in innovation.
Paul Grewal, chief legal officer of Coinbase, said in a social media post that Delaware could lose its status as the first choice for US companies to register. He mentioned that he has tried cases, formed friendships with judges and taught local lawyers in Delaware, but the business environment in the state is currently facing challenges. Although Grewal did not specify the reasons for the threat to Delaware's status, market speculation may involve supervision.
Paul Grewal, Coinbase's chief legal officer, said in an interview about the Securities Exchange Commission's (SEC) approach to cryptocurrencies: Treat these projects in a non-discriminatory manner and let the market decide who wins and who loses, rather than having Washington bureaucrats pick winners and losers.
On January 26th, Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said on social media that Coinbase has invested millions of dollars to defend SOL (Solana) against the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) lawsuit accusing it of being a security. He stressed that his team works every day to defeat this unfair accusation and firmly supports the future development of SOL. He bluntly stated that if supporting SOL is seen as "hate", then he is willing to accept such a label.
Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer of Coinbase, posted on the X platform: "Last month, we successfully rejected an unreasonable request for a court to force us to continue listing a token that no longer meets our listing criteria. Today, Coinbase has decided to completely dismiss BiT Global's unreasonable lawsuit. There is no legal requirement that Coinbase must custody assets that have an unacceptable level of risk due to their association with Justin Sun et al. We have every right and responsibi...
Jake Chervinsky, chief legal officer at Variant Fund, a cryptocurrency venture capital firm, said in a social media post: "Today marks the beginning of a major shift in U.S. crypto policy. The goal is to achieve good regulation and a hundred flowers. The approach for the past four years has been to destroy entire meadows. The risk now is that a thousand scams will emerge: weeds kill flowers."
On January 19, Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer of Coinbase, wrote in X: "We have asked the Second Circuit to hear our provisional appeal. Decades of appellate precedent confirm that'investment contracts' require content of a contractual nature. The Circuit Court can provide...
On January 1st, Ripple Chief Legal Officer Stuart Alderoty outlined six key principles on New Year's Eve, urging the SEC to take a prudent approach to crypto regulation: The SEC only has jurisdiction over securities transactions. The sale of gold bars with contractual rights, ownership or interests in gold mines may be a securities transaction. Selling the same gold bar without after-sales rights or obligations is just an asset sale, and the SEC has no authority to regulate it. The SEC's jurisdi...
According to Bitcoin.com, Ripple's chief legal officer, Stuart Alderoty, recently exposed on social media the US regulator's "Operation Chokepoint 2.0" (a government-led liquidation of the cryptocurrency industry) against the crypto industry. He pointed out that since 2021, institutions such as the Federal Reserve, the FDIC, and the OCC have pressured the crypto industry through bank regulation policies, similar to the regulatory approach that targeted specific industries such as gun shops in 20...
Stuart Alderoty, Ripple's chief legal officer, shared his advice with the incoming US SEC leadership in an X post this week. Alderoty expressed confidence in the transition team's ability to effectively address cryptocurrency regulatory issues and urged a number of actions. "I am confident that the transition team will make the right decision considering these fundamental conditions for cryptocurrencies," he wrote. Alderoty recommends an immediate end to cryptocurrency lawsuits unrelated to frau...
"Hopefully the SEC understands what happened in the election," Paulgrewal.eth, Coinbase's chief legal officer, said in a social media post. "On many, many issues, voters have said loudly and clearly that they want change. Cryptocurrencies are no exception. Stop suing cryptocurrencies and start talking to them. Start making rules now, there's no reason to wait any longer."
On November 7th, Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said recently that he expects "significant changes" to the SEC's cryptocurrency-related cases under the new Trump-nominated chairperson of the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC). "I think the new administration will revisit all cryptocurrency cases brought during Gary Gensler's tenure, distinguishing between obvious scams and non-scams," Grewal told reporters. Although Grewal did not explicitly state that Coinbase and...
Paul Grewal, Coinbase's chief legal officer, said the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's (FDIC) FOIA judge had ordered the agency to produce the Operation Chokepoint 2.0 suspension letter "with remarkable speed" and thanked the court for its action on the matter. He announced that this is an important step towards transparency for the FDIC and other regulators. Coinbase is filing a lawsuit and filing a FOIA request to force regulators to provide clear guidance. Similarly, Grewal decided to ...
Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal has accused the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) of taking covert actions to crack down on the crypto industry. Grewal claims that documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act revealed a series of so-called suspension letters. In these letters, the FDIC is said to have instructed banks to delay or stop providing services to crypto companies. He described the letters as "an attempt by U.S. government entities to cut off law-abiding...
Coinbase's chief legal officer on the X platform said that so far, we have found more than 20 examples of the FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation of the United States) asking banks to "suspend" or "stop providing" or "not continue" to provide crypto banking services. The public deserves transparency, not an agency working behind the scenes of bureaucracy.