In a press release, the NYAG’s office said, “The petition argues that ETH, just like LUNA and UST, is a speculative asset that relies on the efforts of third-party developers in order to provide profit to the holders of ETH. Because of that, KuCoin was required to register before selling ETH, LUNA, or UST.”
KuCoin did not respond to subpoenas filed by the NYAG’s office served via email and in-person.
James also argued that KuCoin sells unregistered securities via KuCoin Earn, its lending and staking product. The Attorney General’s office was able to create a KuCoin account using a computer with a New York-based IP address to buy and sell digital tokens, for which KuCoin charged a fee. It was also able to deposit tokens into the KuCoin Earn product for a fee.
The action brought by the NYAG’s office is not KuCoin’s first brush with regulators. In 2022, Korean regulators accused KuCoin of conducting “illegal business activities” without proper registration. The Dutch Central Bank made similar allegations in December last year, claiming that the exchange was operating without a license.
With her lawsuit, Attorney General James is seeking a court order to stop KuCoin from representing itself as an exchange, prevents the company from operating in New York and directs KuCoin to implement geo-blocking based on IP addresses and GPS location to prevent access to KuCoin’s apps and services services from New York.