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Ripple-SEC lawsuit, truth in the Estabrook notes - The Cryptonomist

source-logo  en.cryptonomist.ch 01 March 2022 05:30, UTC
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The lawsuit between Ripple and the SEC has a new chapter, the so-called Estabrook notes. These are notes about a meeting that took place in 2018 between Ripple Labs CEO Brad Garlinghouse and a SEC commissioner, Elad Roisman

However, the SEC has objected to the use of these documents. 

Summary

Estabrook notes intrude into the Ripple SEC lawsuit

It was on November 9, 2018 when Brad Garlinghouse met with Commissioner Roisman with whom he evidently talked about XRP itself. According to the SEC, the outcome of that meeting, contained in the Estabrook notes, does not need to be disclosed, because Garlinghouse is aware of it, since he was present. In addition, the notes are said to be nothing more than an analysis for possible regulatory input to the SEC. 

However, the SEC itself was in favour of the disclosure of the memorandum concerning the meeting between Brad Garlinghouse and Jay Clayton, who was at the time head of the Securities and Exchange Commission. According to Ripple’s lawyers, this double attitude of the SEC is explained by the fact that the Estabrook notes probably do not find arguments in its favour

That’s why in a letter yesterday, Brad Garlinghouse’s lawyers asked Judge Sara Netburn that this attitude of the US authority not be tolerated

According to crypto lawyer Jeremy Hogan, all this shows the SEC’s weaknesses: 

“the SEC has no evidence AT ALL about the meeting but can only argue that Garlinghouse’s testimony is “self serving” and… ALL testimony is self serving. That’s very x2 weak sauce. By which I mean to say, whatever the Judge rules, the SEC is already dead here”.

XRP earns 7%

The price of XRP

Meanwhile, the price of XRP seems to be benefiting from the good market performance. XRP is currently up 7% over 24 hours, and gains 12% in a week. 

Ripple’s token seems unaffected at the moment by either the lawsuit against the SEC or international tensions. 

Despite remaining far from the all-time high of more than $3.8 put in January 2018, XRP investors, judging by the price trend, are not being affected by the legal affairs. Indeed, they are perhaps even optimistic that the ruling could definitively recognize XRP’s status, which may differ from being a security. 

If Ripple were a security

If the opposite were to happen, with a ruling that the sale of XRP tokens is comparable to the sale of securities, this would have at least three implications:

  • investors would be shareholders in Ripple Labs;
  • exchanges that listed and still list XRP would also have to acknowledge that they had illegally sold a security, with consequences that are hard to imagine. 
  • Every crypto company would have to question itself and analyze the similarities and differences between its token and XRP, because then the SEC’s wrath could fall on all alleged securities, without distinction. 
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