XRP Lawyer Slams Former SEC Chair: A New Development in XRP Lawsuit

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XRP Lawyer Slams Former SEC Chair
  • John Deaton criticizes former SEC Chair Jay Clayton for his stance against XRP programmatic sales ruling.
  • While Clayton pointed out the case’s similarities with some other cases, Deaton argued that the cases are different.
  • Deaton lambasted the former SEC Chair, claiming he was misrepresenting the reality.

John E. Deaton, a prominent figure in the crypto sector who advocates Ripple’s XRP, recently shared an X post on the SEC’s former Chair Jay Clayton’s stance on XRP’s programmatic sales ruling. Reflecting on Clayton’s notion of XRP’s secondary trading, Deaton asserted that “he is misrepresenting the truth-as usual.”

The protracted SEC-Ripple battle had witnessed a string of developments over the past few months. However, the major development was Ripple’s landmark victory against the agency when Judge Analisa Torres ruled that the programmatic sales of XRP tokens on secondary trading platforms did not meet the requirements of a security sale. However, Clayton came forward allegedly challenging the court’s ruling, stating,

“The judge, I believe, found issue its in the initial issuance was, in fact, a securities transaction during the capital raising phase. The question in the Ripple case that I believe the SEC did not win was on the secondary trading. Was that a securities transaction or not? There are other cases with similar facts for the SEC has won that. We will see how that plays out.”

While Clayton tried to bring the case in parallel with some similar cases, pointing out the notion of secondary trading, Deaton argued that in both the Terraform lawsuit and the LBRY lawsuit, the court’s decision was independent of the notion of secondary transactions. Adding that the cases couldn’t be considered similar, he cited, “You can’t equate a summary judgment decision, where all the evidence has been presented, with a motion to dismiss decision, where no evidence has been presented, and the judge must assume EVERYTHING alleged in the Complaint is true.”

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