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Ripple lodges small wins in legal fight as SEC agrees to partial redactions

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Ripple Labs has recorded two small victories in the ongoing U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) lawsuit.

In its first, the San Francisco company has been allowed to keep some of the email correspondence between its executives and other parties private. On March 31, Judge Sarah Netburn directed the SEC and Ripple to meet and confer on the latter’s motion to seal on an interim basis. 

After the two parties met, they agreed on the redactions to two email exchanges but couldn’t find common ground on the other two. The first is an exchange between CEO Brad Garlinghouse and an anonymous party on Rippleworks, Ripple’s non-profit venture capital arm. The second is an exchange between anonymous parties on XRP’s public perception. 

“I think this risk factor is related to why Ripple is likely to be viewed as having more control over XRP as other BTC holders due to the fact that Ripple creates XRP and holds most of this. Just want to know how cryptographic lockup will play a role in this risk factor,” part of the second email reads.

The SEC and Ripple have yet to reach a mutual agreement on the other two documents. For its part, the securities regulator has been very adamant that it will not agree to redactions on emails containing Chris Larsen’s personal financial information. It also insists that emails sharing Ripple’s strategy with private investors must be part of the lawsuit.

However, Ripple’s legal team disagrees. In a letter to the judge, the lawyers claimed the email contains an exchange between former CEO Chris Larsen and a party that had a relationship with Ripple. As such, it was never meant to be public. It also contains sensitive information regarding the initial distribution of XRP.

Meanwhile, Judge Netburn granted Ripple access to SEC’s documents showing its interpretations and views on the XRP digital currency. Ripple will be able to access the SEC’s memos and minutes concerning digital currencies.

Matthew Solomon, one of the lawyers representing Garlinghouse, believes that this is a landmark moment for Ripple and that it may be game over for the SEC if he finds any evidence that the regulator deemed XRP as similar to ETH or BTC.

Follow CoinGeek’s Crypto Crime Cartel series, which delves into the stream of groups—from BitMEX to Binance, BTC.com, BlockstreamShapeShiftCoinbase, Ripple and 
ETH—who have co-opted the digital asset revolution and turned the industry into a minefield for naïve (and even experienced) players in the market.

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All content in this article is for informational purposes only and in no way serves as investment advice. Investing in cryptocurrencies, commodities and stocks is very risky and can lead to capital losses.

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