Federal Judge Blasts SEC for Poorly Argued Attempts To Claim Cryptocurrencies Must Be Regulated by Them
SEC agents cannot explain to a federal judge what its policies and attitudes regarding virtual currencies are—or how they are going to impact the industry.

Many in the virtual currency industry have been confused and bedeviled by the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC) gradual and ill-explained encroachment on their world, with frequent claims from SEC Chair Gary Gensler that most cryptocurrencies should be properly seen legally as "securities" that ought to be regulated by his agency. That would potentially make lots of legit businesses suddenly illegal dealers in "unregistered securities."
In a decision last week in an ongoing bankruptcy case of Voyager Digital Holdings, U.S. bankruptcy Judge Michael E. Wiles in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York laid into SEC agents for their perplexing and officious manner of trying to force through their attitudes about cryptocurrencies-as-securities.
Part of the proposed bankruptcy reorganization plan for Voyager Digital Holdings would involve shifting customer accounts over to cryptocurrency exchange Binance.
The SEC objected to this Binance solution, claiming "that in its view the Debtors had the burden to prove that the rebalancing of the Debtors' cryptocurrency portfolios…would not involve illegal purchases and sales of securities."
The SEC did this, as Judge Wiles complains, essentially through innuendo: "The objection did not take the position that any particular cryptocurrencies are securities, or otherwise explain how or why the Debtors' rebalancing activities might be illegal, although it did contain a vague footnote suggesting that the VGX token was one as to which some unspecified issue might exist," Judge Wiles wrote.
"The SEC also suggested that the Debtors should be required to prove that Binance.US is not operating as a securities broker without registering as such," he continued. "Once again, the SEC did not actually take the position that Binance.US is operating as an unregistered and unlicensed securities broker. Instead, it just suggested that the Debtors had the burden to prove the negative, without offering any evidence or even any reason to think that Binance.US actually is doing anything for which it requires further SEC registrations."
Judge Wiles finds this situation highly aggravating, noting that "Voyager operated, and Binance.US currently operates, in a regulatory environment that at best can be described as highly uncertain."
If the present legal environment in which companies such as Binance must operate is unknown, the future into which the judge must hope his decisions will function is even more so: "The SEC has filed some actions against particular firms with regard to particular cryptocurrencies, and those actions suggest that a wider regulatory assault may be forthcoming. The CFTC [Commodity Futures Trading Commission] seems to have taken some positions that are at odds with the SEC's views. Just how this will all sort itself out, how the pending actions relating to cryptocurrencies will be decided, and just what issues might be raised in future regulatory actions, and how they will affect individual firms or the industry as a whole, is unknown."
Judge Wiles is, thus, unhappy with SEC agents' refusal to give any public certainty to the parties in this case or the industry at large about how their views will affect crypto businesses moving forward.
The SEC had not in its objections in this bankruptcy case "offered any guidance at all as to just what it was that the Debtors allegedly were supposed to prove on these issues, or how the Debtors possibly could prove what the SEC wanted them to prove without receiving any explanation at all from SEC as to just why the Debtors' operations, or Binance.US's operations, might raise legal issues," Judge Wiles noted.
And when he insisted on clarification from the SEC, its agents "initially asked if it could state its position only to me on an in camera basis, but I denied that request and ruled that to the extent the SEC wanted to say something further about its objection, it ought to be stated in the public forum, where all other interested parties could hear and understand the SEC's position."
What Judge Wiles got on the record from the SEC folks did not satisfy him. He was merely told that SEC staff thinks that the VGX token "has aspects of a security, but that the Commission itself has not taken any position on that subject." Similarly, the staff "believes that Binance.US is operating as a securities exchange without registering as such, though once again the Commission itself has not taken any position on that subject."
Judge Wiles found this attempt at legal interference based on staff opinion, without the SEC itself or lawmakers having ratified the staff's opinion as regulation or law, unconvincing and vexing. He rejected the idea that it should be his or Voyager's responsibility to figure out what SEC staff meant about the degree to which the VGX token is a security or the extent to which Binance should be subject to SEC registration issues. He griped that vague interference like this from SEC staff was unduly delaying the resolution of this bankruptcy case, costing customers and creditors lots of money and time.
"I cannot simply put the entire case into an indeterminate and expensive deep freeze while regulators figure out whether they do or do not think there is any problem with the transactions that are being proposed," Judge Wiles wrote. "If there is a problem, I expect a regulator to tell me that it has an actual objection (as opposed to saying that there 'might' be an issue), and also to tell me what the issue is and why it is an issue, so that other parties may address it and so that I may make a proper and well-considered ruling."
"I asked the SEC's counsel at the outset of this hearing to explain what the consequences would be if Binance.US were to be found to have been acting as an unregistered broker dealer," Judge Wiles wrote. "I asked if that would just mean that Binance.US might have to stop certain activities while it pursued a license, or if it would mean that Binance.US would have to shut down all of its activities. The SEC said it could not answer that question."
If Judge Wiles feels this way about the SEC's casual but often destructive mystery-shrouded tiptoeing around the issue of regulating virtual currencies as securities in this one case, imagine how the investors and holders and businesses whose careers and fortunes are built on trying to stay legal in this industry feel.
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Someone needs to do a safety check on Mizek:
Judaism is the most favorably viewed religion in the United States, according to a Pew Research Center study, despite a rise in antisemitic incidents across the country.
With any luck, he’s dead.
He has never been able to get over having his sexual advances rejected by the Judenfraulein!
Someone needs to do a safety check on Mizek:
LOL. He’s trying to find a non-Jewish psychiatrist as we speak.
I am surprised but gratified - but don't tell people that many if not most Jews are also atheists or agnostics but we still call ourselves Jews.
I'm a lapsed conservative. I went to a reform ceremony once, and felt like a Lubavitch Rabbi.
Yes indeed. I prefer that the shuls I don't go to are Orthodox.
"Jews" describes a hereditary nation or tribe with a religion attached. Before Buddhism and Christianity, this was characteristic of all religions. They were not so much a belief system as a set of rituals that served as the glue holding a society (nation, tribe, or city-state) together, there was one religion per society, and one did not expect a foreigner to adopt ones religion.
E.g., Athens had a particular religion. Other Greek city-states had similar religions with overlapping pantheons, they borrowed the best parts of each others religion, but they were still separate. For example, a Corinthian living in Athens probably wasn't welcome at the Athenian religious ceremonies. Even when the Athenians became so sophisticated that some of their ceremonies turned into public performances of original plays, they still considered their religion the bedrock of their nation, and at least once they voted to kill an Athenian who mocked this religion.
OTOH, empires had to become somewhat tolerant of the many religions of the many nations they had incorporated. Babylon moved entire populations around to break up local power centers, but let the relocated peoples practice their own religions. At least one such people, the Hebrews, probably began by identifying as nearly a dozen tribes, but reinforced their national identity and became a single nation with a single religion during their Babylonian captivity. The imperial administration needed a lot of clerks, and the captive Hebrews excelled by becoming literate and useful in their jobs. They encouraged literacy by making it a religious requirement, and became so important a part of the administration that some Babylonians feared them and plotted to murder them all - but the Hebrews had the king's ear. Eventually, Hebrews were allowed to return to their homeland, build temples, write down their oral legends as sacred texts, and (probably quite forcefully) bring those who had stayed behind up to speed with the changes in their religion, including learning to at least read the sacred texts.
They had set this pattern so forcefully that the Jewish religion and nationality held together even after they'd been once again uprooted and scattered across the world under other nations, and even after nearly all the other national religions were supplanted by the supranational religions of Christianity, its offshoot Islam, and the more recent and radical offshoot, Communism. Judaism is a reinforcement for the Jewish nation, but not a necessity; a Jewish atheist is still a Jew. And if the Jews forget this, the antisemites don't. Within living memory, many descendants of the Jewish nation who went to a Lutheran church every Sunday were murdered as Jews...
Link to Pew article: https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2023/03/15/americans-feel-more-positive-than-negative-about-jews-mainline-protestants-catholics/
How can they be securities when there is nothing there to secure?
That is a good question. See https://www.sec.gov/corpfin/framework-investment-contract-analysis-digital-assets
Note the Howey test.
>>Many in the virtual currency industry have been confused and bedeviled ...
really? this confuses and bedevils me.
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Look, the proper role for the judiciary, like the media, to to support the executive branch and other bureaucrats. Unless the wrong party is in the White House, and then it's Resist! without norms.
Don't you know? It's somewhere in the U. S. constitution. All human activity in the United States must be REGULATED by the federal government.
The problem is the ‘government’ pretends liability isn’t a crime.
If you can get that *special* privilege of being ‘poor’ you get to STEAL all you want — no consequences. There should be a court order to sell off all assets of said ‘liable’ to pay debts owed and if that doesn’t cover the cost said ‘liable’ should join the prison system for their ‘THEFT’ living. And that is what 'Justice' is.
SEC: BFYTW
By the plain English definition of 'securities' that are the measure of the entire existing field, all of the non-Bitcoin 'crypto' tokens and coins ARE securities. So much scamming has been going on because the sharps realized that they could create and sell their own securities, hold a large bundle for themselves, manipulate the market to their own advantage, and do the standard pump and dump on retail investors. All of them SHOULD be reguated, just as all other securities are regulated right now. Only Bitcoin has clean hands, as Bitcoin has no insiders who could play games. Remember FTX? or have you forgotten already?
Bitcoin is a store of value and a currency, but clearly no more a security than is gold, dollars, silver, or other non revenue generating assets such as artwork and collectibles. There are companies that mine and hold crypto, such as RIOT, MARA, and others, that are securities, trade on stock exchanges, and are regulated by the SEC.