Experts Explain Why SEC’s Interlocutory Appeal In Ripple Case Was A Mistake
August 21 2023 - 05:55AM
NEWSBTC
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recently
filed an interlocutory appeal following Judge Analisa Torres’
ruling in favor of Ripple. However, an attorney and crypto
enthusiast Greg Beuke believes the SEC made a mistake in appealing
the decision. SEC Misunderstood Judge Torres’ Ruling
Reacting to the news that the SEC had filed a motion to certify an
interlocutory appeal, Beuke stated that the regulator
“fundamentally misunderstands” the ruling. According to him, the
Judge didn’t rule programmatic sales cannot constitute investment
contracts. Related Reading: Ethereum Whale Avoids
Market Crash, Do They Know Something You Don’t? He explained that
Judge Torres only ruled that programmatic sales didn’t constitute
investment contracts in this particular case because the SEC failed
to establish that XRP investors who bought over exchanges did so,
hoping they would profit from Ripple’s efforts. The SEC also failed
to adduce any significant evidence to bolster its case. Beuke
highlighted that the agency didn’t provide any “single XRP holder”
who said he expected to profit from Ripple’s venture despite that
being the basis of the SEC’s argument. Instead, it relied on
“cherry picked statements from Ripple & select employees,”
which the attorney believes was inadequate to discharge the burden
of proof placed on the SEC. Beuke further called the SEC’s move of
an interlocutory appeal a “huge strategic mistake.” Usually, a
party appealing a final ruling can interpret it in a way that
bolsters its argument without the Judge who gave the ruling being
able to clarify why it made such a judgment. However, in this
case, the SEC filed an interlocutory appeal (an appeal before a
final order is made) which allows Judge Torres to clarify her
ruling and probably put a dent in the SEC’s case, as Beuke argues.
He believes that the Judge will make it clear that the SEC failed
to discharge its burden of proof. XRP price continues to
decline | Source: XRPUSD on Tradingview.com SEC To Lose Its Appeal
In Ripple Case? Beuke pointed out that no new evidence can be
adduced upon appeal, and neither can the SEC make new arguments. As
such, the 2nd circuit will only have the records to work with, and
going by it, the regulator provided little or no evidence to prove
its case. Related Reading: The $200 Million BNB Bridge
Exploiter Just Got Liquidated On Venus While the appeal court might
be inclined to accept the SEC’s underlying argument that XRP’s
programmatic sales did indeed constitute an investment contract,
Beuke has stated the court will avert its mind to Judge Torres’
ruling, which was based “on the undisputed factual record,” which
shows that the SEC failed to prove its case. The SEC is likely to
lose as it was expected to prove that a “reasonable retail XRP
purchaser was aware of Ripple and relied on Ripple’s efforts for
profits.” Furthermore, Ripple seems to have a more solid case as
the SEC had no reply to affidavits of XRP holders, which prominent
XRP lawyer John Deaton brought forward. Featured image from iStock,
chart from Tradingview.com
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