
The House Financial Services Committee is investigating the debanking of the cryptocurrency industry following testimony from the CEOs of Stellar and Anchorage Digital. These executives revealed that their companies, despite being federally-regulated, were explicitly dropped by their banks due to their involvement in cryptocurrency. Rep. French Hill emphasized that legal businesses in the U.S. should have the freedom to access banking services. The investigation comes in light of allegations that the U.S. government, through the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), has been instructing banks to distance themselves from crypto businesses. Documents obtained by Coinbase's legal team through a lawsuit against the FDIC show that the regulator asked banks in 2022 to pause all crypto asset-related activities, citing regulatory uncertainty. This move is seen by some in the crypto industry as part of what they call 'Operation Chokepoint 2.0,' an alleged effort to restrict crypto businesses' access to banking services.




FDIC ORDERS BANKS TO HIT PAUSE ON CRYPTO—DOCUMENTS OUT NOW So, the FDIC told some banks to freeze crypto activity. Documents just dropped showing they made that call in 2022, citing sketchy crypto regulations. Coinbase’s legal chief is all over this, saying it proves Operation… https://t.co/FmMxs83AkZ
FDIC ASKS BANKS TO PAUSE CRYPTO ACTIVITIES Newly released court documents reveal that the FDIC instructed certain financial institutions to halt crypto-related activities in 2022, citing regulatory uncertainty surrounding digital assets. Coinbase’s legal officer emphasized that… https://t.co/LxViKwRPVH
Coinbase publishes FDIC documents, obtained via a lawsuit, that it says prove crypto businesses were systematically walled off from banking by the regulator (@jesseahamilton / CoinDesk) https://t.co/1bJwdZAicc https://t.co/4QPdZ5y5hB https://t.co/ZOzeer1FAj