The crypto industry crackdown spearheaded by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) could be put to rest by a decades-old legal doctrine, according to one of the regulator’s previous advisors. Here's the latest.
Former SEC Advisor: Gensler's Crypto Crackdown Could be Stopped by Legal Doctrine
Source: Adobe Kristina Blokhin
The crypto industry crackdown spearheaded by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) could be put to rest by a decades-old legal doctrine, according to one of the regulators previous advisors.
In a recent episode of The Scoop podcast, J.W. Verret – a former advisory committee member to SEC chairman Gary Gensler – explained how the major questions doctrine could affect the result of the agency‘s latest lawsuits against two of crypto’s largest global companies: Binance and Coinbase.
Verret said the major questions doctrine affects “how courts look at what executive agencies do in the so-called independent agencies and consider how much deference to give the things that they do.”
Historically, the Chevron doctrine has granted regulatory agencies broad discretion in how they oversee certain industries based on broad mandates from Congress with vague specifics.
However, the major questions doctrine, which is viewed as a competing doctrine, states that an agency must receive explicit approval from Congress before trying to regulate a matter of “national, economic or political importance.”
Verret said the major questions doctrine most likely wont come into play until the Coinbase and Binance.US cases reach the appellate courts. “But it's one of the things that looms over these cases, without a doubt,” he said.
The law professor added that hes “more excited to trade on Coinbase” as a result of the lawsuit.
“I think it's an argument that Coinbase and Binance are going to run with,” said Verret. The formers CEO, Brian Armstrong, has repeatedly called for Congress to provide crypto with regulatory clarity, to prevent the industry from migrating further offshore.
By contrast, chairman Gensler has asserted that existing securities laws are enough to govern crypto, referring to the Binance and Coinbase lawsuits as a “straightforward securities case, but its in the context of crypto.”
Gensler has received backlash from crypto-supportive members of congress, including House Majority Whip Tom Emmer, who co-authored a bill this month to both restructure the SEC and fire Gensler.
Former SEC official John Reed Stark debated billionaire investor Mark Cuban on this subject last week, with the former arguing that crypto has all of the regulatory clarity it needs.
“Securities regulation is not meant to be precise but is instead intentionally drafted to be broad and all-encompassing,” he explained. “Clarity is not just uncommon, it is deliberately avoided.”
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
9.59
9.64
North Korean Malware Targets macOS Users by Evading Apple Notarization
Thune helped cosponsor a crypto bill in 2022 called the Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act
DeltaPrime Protocol Attacked on Arbitrum and Avalanche, Resulting in $4.8 Million Loss
Polymarket Founder Raided by FBI After Trump Win, Company Says
0.00