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US Judge Denies SEC Push for Injunction Against Crypto Startup

US Judge Denies SEC Push for Injunction Against Crypto Startup

US Judge Denies SEC Push for Injunction Against Crypto Startup

A US District Judge ruled that the SEC has not yet provided sufficient evidence that Blockvest broke securities laws.

A US District Judge ruled that the SEC has not yet provided sufficient evidence that Blockvest broke securities laws.

A US District Judge ruled that the SEC has not yet provided sufficient evidence that Blockvest broke securities laws.

AccessTimeIconNov 29, 2018, 8:30 PM
Updated Aug 18, 2021, 10:20 PM

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A federal judge has denied a preliminary injunction filed by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which sought to freeze assets belonging to crypto startup Blockvest based on alleged violations of securities laws.

In a ruling dated Nov. 27, U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel ruled that the SEC has not proven that Blockvest – or its founder Reginald Buddy Ringgold – violated federal securities laws, and therefore denied the asset freeze request, among other actions (a temporary restraining order already froze the company's assets briefly).

Stephen Palley, an attorney with Anderson Kill, told CoinDesk that, unless there is another order or agreement which may not yet be public, the denial means Blockvest and Ringgold's assets should no longer be frozen.

The SEC first brought charges against Blockvest and Ringgold in mid-October, when it accused the two of falsely claiming that the regulator had approved of its token sale, among other issues.

In its case, the SEC alleged that 32 individuals who interacted with BLV tokens in a pre-sale were effectively sold securities, which Blockvest denies. Instead, the company claims, these 32 individuals helped Blockvest test aspects of its platform.

These 32 testers did transfer bitcoin and ethereum onto the Blockvest exchange, but no tokens were released to them, according to the ruling.

The judge did not make a ruling on whether the BLV tokens were securities, writing that there was insufficient evidence one way or another.

He wrote:

"At this stage, without full discovery and disputed issues of material facts, the Court cannot make a determination whether the BLV token offered to the 32 test investors was a 'security.' Thus, Plaintiff has not demonstrated that the BLV tokens purchased by the 32 test investors were 'securities' as defined under the securities laws."

Deeper questions

Palley explained that "there are questions of fact," based on the judge's ruling.

"I think what the key takeaway ... is, one, just because something looks dodgy doesn't mean that it's securities fraud or that a securities case can be made, [and] number two, the case isn't over yet, the judge said 'look there's a fact dispute, we have to go to trial,'" he said.

Further, the judge noted that Blockvest and Ringgold suspended the company's upcoming token sale after retaining counsel, and that "Plaintiff has not presented any misrepresentations by Defendants since they have retained counsel," though "there is evidence" to support the claim that Ringgold did make some "misrepresentations ... prior to having retained counsel."

"Therefore, Plaintiff has not demonstrated a reasonable likelihood that the wrong will be repeated," he later wrote.

The SEC has "kind of won in that sense," Palley noted, as the company did not raise any funds using tokens.

When reached for comment, Ringgold said "we are happy to be out from under the temporary restraining order," and said the platform is "dedicated to complying with all laws and regulations that might govern" the industry.

Ringgold added:

"The litigation was fueled by a number of our own mistakes. We admitted those mistakes in our papers filed with Judge Curiel. Having said that, none of the misstatements were made with the intention that anyone rely on the alleged statements for investment. We did not raise capital based on the mistaken representations alleged. We did not sell securities to anyone who relied on such mistaken statements. There was never any intent to defraud investors."

Read the full ruling below:

Courtroom image via Shutterstock

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