Within the 74-page complaint, the CFTC has labeled Ether, Binance USD, Tether and Litecoin as commodities along with Bitcoin, and made a few other startling claims.
The surprise lawsuit from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) against crypto exchange Binance sent shock waves across the markets today.
In addition to allegations of market manipulation and a lack of compliance effort, the regulator has also accused the exchange of not cooperating with investigative subpoenas and obscuring the location of its executive offices. Binance has rejected many of the allegations.
However, the devil is in the details when it comes to the 74-page complaint. Here are a few interesting snippets you may have missed.
Tokens labeled as commodities
Contrary to assertions by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission chief Gary Gensler on crypto assets, the latest CFTC lawsuit has labeled Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Tether and Binance USD as commodities.
Earlier this year, the SEC argued that BUSD is an “unregistered security” in its Wells notice against Paxos. Gensler on many occasions has also argued that virtually all crypto assets are securities, with the exception of Bitcoin.
https://twitter.com/scott_lew_is/status/1640389520762847234?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1640389520762847234%7Ctwgr%5E48f784ec9dde4cff8d900685d5352efccb57b418%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fcointelegraph.com%2Fnews%2F7-details-in-the-cftc-lawsuit-against-binance-you-may-have-missed
Sheila Warren, CEO of the Crypto Council for Innovation said the statement is a “powerful shot across the bow of the SEC” and could have significant implications for the industry and for which regulator will have ultimate authority.
Meanwhile, Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal criticized the lack of agreement between the two U.S. regulators, stating:
“A security can apparently also be a commodity, except when it’s not. And it depends on which regulator you ask, and when. If you’re confused, you are not alone. Is this really the best American law has to offer?”
CZ’s phone was accessed
Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao has been named as a defendant and has been repeatedly singled out throughout the complaint.
Interestingly, the CFTC stated it was been able to gather evidence by collecting Signal text chains and group chats from “Zhao’s telephone.” Many are now wondering how this was possible.
CFTC vs. Binance complaint linked below. Don't have the energy to thread it right now but so far very similar to Bitmex complaint, just on a ton of anabolics and with more crime.https://t.co/IzwvPcMyAZ
— Meat (🥩,🥩) (@MeatEsq) March 27, 2023
“Zhao has communicated over Signal with the auto-delete functionality enabled with numerous Binance officers, employees, and agents for widely varying purposes,” said the CFTC.
Terrorist activity accusations
Another startling allegation from the commodities regulator accuses the firm’s employees of knowing that its platform had facilitated “illegal activities.”
“Internally, Binance officers, employees, and agents have acknowledged that the Binance platform has facilitated potentially illegal activities.”
It specifically referred to a February 2019 incident in which former compliance chief Samuel Lim received information “regarding HAMAS transactions.” According to the filing, Lim explained to a colleague that terrorists usually send “small sums” as “large sums constitute money laundering.”
VIP program perks
Meanwhile, a Binance “VIP” program with preferential rates and perks has also been scrutinized by the regulator.
In addition to allegedly encouraging customers to use virtual private networks (VPNs) to access the platform, the CFTC also alleged that part of the perks for VIP customers was that they were given “prompt notification” of any law enforcement inquiry about their account.
“Zhao wanted U.S. customers, including VIP customers, to transact on Binance because it was profitable for Binance to retain those customers,” it alleged.
Ignoring U.S. regulatory requirements
The CFTC also accused Binance of being aware of U.S. regulatory requirements but ignoring them and making “deliberate, strategic decisions to evade federal law.”
The filing goes back to internal messages between Binance executives in 2018 regarding its strategy for the U.S. exchange and complying with sanctions imposed by regulators for the global exchange.
Fines and injunctions
Towards the end of the document, the commodities regulator said it is seeking monetary penalties, disgorgement of any trading profits, salaries, commissions, loans, or fees gained from their purportedly wrongful actions, along with paying penalties to resolve the investigations.
It also orders a permanent injunction against further violations.
14/ The CFTC case contains detailed internal chats and correspondence (even a direct reference to CZ’s phone).
How the CFTC obtained this information is still unclear. Was it submitted voluntarily as part of a subpoena? Are former employees collaborating with the CFTC?
— Henri Arslanian (@HenriArslanian) March 27, 2023
The CFTC “doesn’t waste its time on jabs — it goes straight for the knockout,” said Warren from the Crypto Council for Innovation.
Binance has already rejected a number of allegations and claims from the commodities regulator, hinting that a more in-depth response is incoming.
On March 28, CZ responded to what he termed an “unexpected and disappointing civil complaint,” stating that the company has cooperated with the CFTC for the past two years.
In comments to Cointelegraph, a spokesperson from Binance has maintained that the exchange maintains country blocks for U.S. citizens, regardless of where they live in the world.
“Consistent with regulatory expectations globally, we have implemented a robust ‘three lines of defense’ approach to risk and compliance, which includes, but is not limited, to:
- Ensuring mandatory KYC for all users worldwide
- Maintaining country blocks for anyone who is a resident of the US
- Blocking anyone who is identified as a US citizen regardless of where they live in the world
- Blocking for any devices using a US cellular provider
- Blocking log-ins from any US IP address
- Preventing deposits and withdrawals from US banks for credit cards”
Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/7-details-in-the-cftc-lawsuit-against-binance-you-may-have-missed