TLDR
- Coinbase has requested additional documents from the SEC as part of their ongoing legal battle.
- The SEC claims Coinbase’s request is “overreaching” and would require reviewing 3 million more documents.
- The SEC has already provided 240,000 documents and is reviewing 117,000 more.
- Coinbase wants access to SEC Chair Gary Gensler’s emails, which the SEC says is “prejudicial.”
- The legal dispute stems from the SEC’s June 2023 lawsuit against Coinbase for allegedly operating as an unregistered securities exchange.
The ongoing legal battle between the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has taken a new turn.
The SEC is now pushing back against Coinbase’s request for additional documents, calling it “overreaching” and “disproportional” to the needs of the case.
In a court filing on Monday, the SEC stated that it has already provided Coinbase with over 240,000 documents relevant to the case and is currently reviewing an additional 117,000.
Despite this, Coinbase has filed a motion to compel the SEC to produce even more documents, including emails from SEC Chair Gary Gensler.
The SEC argues that Coinbase’s request would require the agency to review and potentially produce over 3 million more documents, a task they claim is excessive and largely irrelevant to the case.
“The burden of searching and producing or logging, one by one, an additional three million irrelevant external or assuredly privileged internal SEC documents that Coinbase’s limitless request entails is thus entirely disproportional to the needs of the case,” the SEC stated in its filing.
The regulator also strongly opposes Coinbase’s demand for access to Gensler’s emails, describing it as “prejudicial” and unnecessarily time-consuming for the SEC Chair.
The agency maintains that internal discussions or communications with market participants are not relevant to the court’s analysis of the facts and law in this case.
This legal dispute began in June 2023 when the SEC sued Coinbase, alleging that the company operates as an unregistered securities exchange, broker, and clearing agency.
Coinbase, in turn, argues that the SEC is overstepping its regulatory authority and has failed to provide clear guidelines on what constitutes a security in the cryptocurrency space.
Paul Grewal, Coinbase’s chief legal officer, responded to the SEC’s latest filing on social media platform X (formerly Twitter). He reiterated Coinbase’s stance that the SEC should be transparent in its regulatory approach to the digital assets industry.
Update: Today @SECGov filed its response to our request to produce important documents showing the record of the SEC’s inconsistent views of digital assets and its own regulatory reach. If the SEC is going to engage in an unprecedented regulation by enforcement campaign, the… https://t.co/MxQ1omDGN3
— paulgrewal.eth (@iampaulgrewal) August 5, 2024
“If the SEC is going to engage in an unprecedented regulation by enforcement campaign, the least they owe to those they target – and the public – is transparency,” Grewal wrote.
The cryptocurrency community has shown support for Coinbase’s position, with some users agreeing that the SEC owes transparency to the companies it seeks to regulate and the broader crypto community.
As the legal battle continues, both parties remain firm in their positions. The SEC insists that the court’s analysis of facts and law, not internal discussions, will decide the case. Coinbase, on the other hand, believes that access to these additional documents is crucial for its defense.
The outcome of this case could have significant implications for the regulation of cryptocurrency exchanges in the United States. As of now, no response has been received from either the SEC or Coinbase regarding requests for further comments on the matter.