
The ongoing legal battle between Ripple and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has seen significant developments. Initially, the SEC sought a $2 billion penalty from Ripple for allegedly selling XRP as an unregistered security. However, the court ruled that XRP is not a security, and Ripple has contested the SEC's demands. The SEC has now reduced its penalty demand to $102.6 million, a substantial decrease from the initial amount. On June 13th, Ripple proposed to limit its penalty to $10 million, arguing that there are no victims requiring compensation. The SEC has rejected Ripple's request for a lower penalty, citing insufficient offer compared to the Terraform Labs settlement and maintaining its demand for $876.3 million. Ripple's chief legal officer has countered the SEC's allegations, emphasizing that the company is agreeing to nothing.
#Ripple's Chief Legal Officer has challenged the SEC's allegations, emphasizing that Ripple's case has no victims requiring compensation. This response follows Ripple's proposal to limit its penalty to $10M, significantly lower than the SEC's initial demand of $2B ⬇️ #cryptonews https://t.co/HNLudY9Q0p
🇺🇸 IS THE SEC ON THE ROPES WITH RIPPLE? Since the end of 2020, Ripple has been involved in a lawsuit with the SEC after they accused the company of offering XRP as an unregistered security. In its initial ruling, the court said the XRP token was not a security but that the… https://t.co/BYPTFuWnA9
.@Ripple's chief legal officer has countered the #SEC's allegations following the #crypto firm's proposal to limit its penalty to $10 million. https://t.co/8t9G0bo1al


