sec cuts crypto cases

In an unprecedented regulatory about-face, the Securities and Exchange Commission has dramatically reversed course on cryptocurrency enforcement under new leadership.

Since Trump’s return to office, over 60% of active crypto cases have been dismissed, paused, or had penalties reduced — a stark contrast to the mere 4% dismissal rate for non-crypto cases during the same period.

The numbers don’t lie. Zero new cryptocurrency cases have been filed since Trump’s inauguration. Compare that to the Biden administration’s average of two cases per month, and you start to see a pattern. Trump’s first term averaged one monthly. Coincidence? Hardly.

High-profile cases have felt the impact. The Binance enforcement action? Dropped or softened. That Winklevoss-backed firm case? Stalled faster than a Bitcoin transaction during network congestion. Cases involving Trump-connected firms? Mysteriously paused or rolled back.

Paul S. Atkins, the new SEC chairman, isn’t shy about the shift. He’s calling it a “new day” for the industry. His focus? Flagrant fraud, not aggressive enforcement. The old Crypto Assets unit is gone, replaced by something called the “Cyber and Emerging Technologies Unit.” Sounds fancy.

The stats for fiscal year 2025 tell the story: 313 stand-alone actions, a 10-year low. Weekly enforcement actions plummeted from 11.44 to 3.61. That’s quite the nosedive. The dismissal of seven cryptocurrency cases demonstrates a significant pullback in SEC enforcement activities.

This shift aligns with the broader aim to establish the US as a competitive digital hub for cryptocurrency innovation against growing markets in Asia and Europe.

Many investors are now turning to cold wallets for securing their cryptocurrency assets as regulatory uncertainty continues to loom over the market.

Of course, the White House has ambitious goals, aiming to make the US the “crypto capital of the world.” When questioned about potential favoritism, the SEC denies political motivation. They cite legal and policy reasons. Sure they do.

Career SEC lawyers are reportedly alarmed at the reversals. Can you blame them? It’s an unprecedented pullback for a single industry.

The shift has boosted investor confidence, though. Startups that once paused US expansion are reconsidering. The message is clear: crypto is back in the government’s good graces.

Whether that’s a triumph for innovation or a regulatory retreat depends entirely on who you ask.

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