Oregon AG lawsuit against Coinbase calls XRP unregistered security
2025年4月22日 - 8:03PM
Cointelegraph


Oregon Attorney General Dan Rayfield’s lawsuit against Coinbase
argues that XRP and other digital assets are unregistered
securities.
Rayield sued US-based, publicly traded crypto exchange Coinbase
for allegedly violating Oregon’s securities law. In an April 18
announcement, the Oregon Department of Justice said the suit
was part of an effort to fill what it described as a regulatory
vacuum left by federal agencies under the Trump administration:
“States must fill enforcement vacuum being left by federal
regulators who are abandoning these cases under Trump
administration,“ the department said.
Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal voiced his frustration
over the lawsuit in an April 21 X post. Justin Slaughter, the vice
president of regulatory affairs at crypto investment firm Paradigm,
pointed out
that the lawsuit claims a long list of digital assets, including
XRP (XRP), are
unregistered securities.
Source: Paul
Grewal
Yarden Noy, partner at crypto legal firm DLT Law, told
Cointelegraph that if the court ruled these assets are securities,
it “would mostly create more confusion in this regard.” It would
not be a binding precedent in other cases, not even within Oregon,
he added.
Still, Noy explained that the court decision could be used by
regulators and potential plaintiffs to build and make their cases.
He said:
“Just like the decision in the Ripple case […] which
the complaint seems to be ignoring entirely, did not make all
tokens immediately listable on US platforms, I don’t expect the
opposite to happen here.”
Related:
Court grants 60-day pause of SEC, Ripple appeals
case
A long list of crypto assets
Paradigm’s vice president of regulatory affairs Justin Slaughter
called the action a “kitchen sink lawsuit.” The list of tokens
cited includes high-profile altcoins such as Aave
(AAVE), Avalanche
(AVAX), Uniswap
(UNI) and Near
Protocol (NEAR), as well as the wrapped version of Terra’s
collapsed token, wLUNA — but not LUNA itself.
The complaint does not explain why certain wrapped assets were
included while others were excluded. It states:
“Coinbase—through the Coinbase Platform and Prime—has
made available for trading in Oregon crypto assets that are offered
and sold as investment contracts, and thus as securities. This
includes, but is not limited to, the units of each of the crypto
securities further described below.“
Related:
Circle, BitGo about to apply for bank charters, others
may follow: WSJ
XRP in the legal crosshairs once again
Ripple Labs, the firm behind XRP, has already faced a years-long
legal battle with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. Ripple
was hit with a lawsuit by the SEC in late 2020,
calling XRP a “$1.3 billion unregistered securities
offering.”
The same lawsuit was dropped by the SEC in late March, but it
provided
little legal certainty for the crypto industry. Oregon’s
complaint comes amid growing concern among state officials that
federal regulators are pulling back from crypto enforcement. The
suit appears to be part of a broader trend of state-level
authorities stepping in.
Before Oregon’s action, XRP’s legal standing was being viewed as
increasingly clear. Coinbase — a crypto exchange known for its
relatively cautious stance on regulatory matters —
added XRP futures to its derivatives trading platform on April
21.
Magazine:
XRP win leaves Ripple and industry with no crypto legal
precedent set
...
Continue reading Oregon AG lawsuit against Coinbase
calls XRP unregistered security
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Oregon AG lawsuit against Coinbase calls XRP
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