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Can Ripple (XRP) Lose Against the SEC? Lawyers Debate Following LBRY Lawsuit Judgment
LBRY Inc – the firm that’s responsible for developing the LBRY Protocol – announced that it will be closing shop. This comes after it received a final judgment in the case against the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) earlier this week.
LBRY lost the case. The judge sided with the Commission and ruled that the company violated Section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933 when issuing the token.
Now, lawyers are debating whether Ripple could share similar faith as the company is also amidst a massive clash with the SEC over whether or not it facilitated the sale of unregistered securities when issuing its XRP token.
The Case in Point
Earlier this week, LBRY Inc confirmed that it will be winding down its operations after it lost the case against the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The court ruled that the company violated Section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933 in its issuance of the platform’s native cryptocurrency. Some lawyers, however, believe that the firm’s legal counsel missed an opportunity.
Commenting on the matter was Bill Hughes, a lawyer at Consensus, who said:
The comment refers to a note from the Judge presiding over the case between LBRY and the SEC, which said:
How Does This Relate to Ripple’s Case?
Another lawyer – Bill Morgan – brought the question to Twitter, asking why can’t Ripple raise the Major Questions Doctrine (MQD) before Judge Analisa Torres (the Judge in the case between the SEC and Ripple) makes her decision.
Opposing any applicability of the MQD to SEC enforcement actions was Marc Fagel – a form SEC veteran, who said:
Well-known XRP holders attorney John Deaton also took part in the discussion, arguing that there’s “no existing law in determining the secondary sales of an asset previously utilized in an investment contract, transaction or scheme, also constitutes an investment contract.” He said that this makes it at least arguably that the MQD does apply to secondary market asset sales such as those on Coinbase.
Fagel maintained his position: