Empower Oversight, a government watchdog, filed a lawsuit alleging that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) failed to comply with Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. The request aimed to uncover potential conflicts of interest and bias within the SEC regarding regulation of cryptocurrencies, particularly Ethereum.
SEC’s Investigation into Ethereum Trading Continues
Commonly referred to as ‘ETH Gate’, the deal highlights growing concerns about the consistency and transparency of the SEC’s approach to digital asset regulation. Tristan Leavitt, president of Empower Oversight, criticized the SEC’s handling of FOIA requests in a public statement. :
By being slow to respond to FOIA requests, the SEC is impeding Empower’s oversight of SEC officials with conflicts of interest in cryptocurrency matters. The public has the right to see all documents related to how these officials violated ethics guidelines and how their agencies failed to hold them accountable.
The core of the ‘ETH Gate’ controversy is the actions and speeches of two former key former SEC officials, including William Hinman, who served as Director of the Corporate Finance Bureau from May 2017 to December 2020, and former SEC Chairman Jay Clayton. unfolds around the center.
Hinman became the focus of scrutiny for a June 14, 2018 speech in which he publicly stated that Ethereum (ETH) was not considered a security by the SEC. This stance appears to contradict the SEC’s later aggressive stance on Ripple Labs’ XRP, which the SEC classified as a security toward the end of Clayton’s tenure.
Empower Oversight’s FOIA request, launched in August 2021, sought to uncover the extent of potential bias and ethical violations in the SEC’s cryptocurrency trading. The organization’s investigation was prompted in part by revelations about Hinman’s financial ties to his former employer, Simpson Thacher, who was reportedly interested in promoting Ethereum.
These revelations have raised questions about the fairness of SEC regulatory actions and potential conflicts of interest at the highest levels of the agency.
Despite the SEC’s initial agreement to search for relevant records based on terms provided by Empower Oversight, the agency was accused of delaying and failing to conduct such searches, leading to several lawsuits aimed at forcing the SEC to release requested documents. I lost. Empower Oversight’s ongoing legal efforts have so far resulted in the SEC turning over over 324 pages of documents following litigation related to its December 2022 FOIA request.
The latest lawsuit, filed by Empower Oversight in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, seeks compliance with the December 2022 FOIA request. Leavitt’s communications on X (formerly Twitter) highlight the broader stakes of the campaign. “Empower Oversight has filed a new lawsuit against the SEC because it refuses to comply with FOIA. #ethgate (…) So the fight for transparency continues, and without transparency, accountability is impossible.”
‘ETHgate’ not only exposes potential conflicts of interest and selective enforcement within the SEC, but also raises important questions about the agency’s regulatory framework and its impact on cryptocurrency markets. As this legal battle unfolds, it will provide important insight into the SEC’s internal decision-making processes, potentially impacting future regulatory policy and the digital asset regulatory environment.
At press time, Ethereum (ETH) was trading at $3,376.
Featured image from Reuters, chart from TradingView.com