Les dirigeants de Ripple innocentés des accusations « sans fondement » de la SEC
- Le PDG de Ripple, Brad Garlinghouse, et le président exécutif Chris Larsen ont été innocentés de toutes les accusations.
- La SEC a voté en faveur du rejet des accusations portées contre les dirigeants avec préjudice.
- Larsen stated that the SEC tried to “advance a political agenda to suffocate crypto in America.”
- Garlinghouse said that he was subjected to accusations “from a rogue regulator with a political agenda.”
Dans le cadre d'une énorme victoire pour le secteur des actifs numériques, le PDG et le président exécutif de la société américaine de paiement axée sur la blockchain Ripple ont été innocentés de toutes les accusations portées contre eux par la Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) des États-Unis au cours des dernières années. Le régulateur a voté en faveur du rejet des accusations portées contre Brad Garlinghouse, le PDG, et Chris Larsen, le président, avec préjudice.
Selon un communiqué de presse partagé by the firm, this is the third consecutive victory for Ripple, Garlinghouse, and Larsen after the United States district judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Judge Analisa Torres, ruled in July 2023 that “XRP is not, in and of itself, a security.”
“Instead of looking for the criminals stealing customer funds on offshore exchanges that were courting political favor, the SEC went after the good guys—along with our entire company of innovators and entrepreneurs—who are building a regulated business based in the U.S. We look forward to the day this chapter is closed once and for all, now that the SEC has dropped the curtain on their absurd theatrics against Chris and me,” said Garlinghouse.
Garlinghouse noted that for over three years, Larsen and his company were subjected to various accusations “from a rogue regulator with a political agenda.” Finally, they have been cleared of all charges.
Garlinghouse s'est également rendu sur la plateforme de médias sociaux X (anciennement connue sous le nom de Twitter) pour exprimer ses pensées.
On the other hand, Larsen stated that the SEC tried to “advance a political agenda to suffocate crypto in America.” He added that “it is a travesty that we were forced to defend ourselves from an ill-advised attack that was flawed from the day it was filed.”
“It is an abuse by the administrative state that politically connected special interests, with clear and proven conflicts of interest, were able to drag our names through the mud in an attempt to ruin us personally and destroy a company so many have worked so hard for so long to build,” Larsen said.
As reported earlier by Bitnation, Ripple CEO Garlinghouse slammed the SEC’s approach to réglementation des actifs numériques par le biais de l'application, stating that the move is driving crypto businesses outside the country. The firm also noted in its press release that nearly 90% of Ripple’s business is outside the U.S. and hiring remains focused in major international markets.