The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) submitted a proposed settlement agreement with Ripple, CEO Brad Garlinghouse and executive chairman Chris Larsen to resolve the long -term civil enforcement measures of the committee against the company and its managers.
In an application submitted on May 8The SEC and the defendants jointly asked to give the American court for the southern district of New York an indicative ruling on whether it would dissolve his final judgment of 7 August 2024.
Subsequent steps
The request also asks the court to order the release of the civil fine of $ 125 million that is currently being held in Escrow. According to the proposed conditions, Ripple would pay $ 50 million to the SEC to the satisfaction of the judgment, while the Escrow would return the remaining $ 75 million to the company.
The SEC stated that her decision to look for a resolution are current enforcement priorities and the broader context of his regulatory attitude towards the crypto industry. The supervisor emphasized that the settlement does not reflect a judgment on the underlying merits of the case or implies a precedent for other matters.
The final decision is based on Ripple’s agreement to pay a civil fine of $ 50 million and the expected admission of all professions.
According to lawyer James Filan, the trial includes extra steps. Firstly, Judge Analisa Torres must provide an indicative decision stating whether it would resolve the order and approve the proposed fund distribution.
If such a decision is issued, the SEC and Ripple would jointly ask a limited provisional detention of the US Court of Appeals to return the case to Judge Torres the second circuit. When granting the pre -trial detention, the parties would submit a motion in court to formally request the exemption in the settlement.
Both parties would move to reject their respective professions in the second circuit, which would conclude the case after the dissolution of the order and the distribution of the funds.
Closing the long -standing legal battle
The original case, submitted in December 2020, claimed that Ripple’s sale of XRP non -registered supply offerings were contrary to federal legislation.
The sec accused Garlinghouse and Larsen also of helping and maintaining those violations. The case has since become one of the best legal legal fights in the crypto industry, with important judgments about the classification of XRP transactions and extensive appeal procedures.
In October 2024, the SEC submitted a notification of appeal with the judgment of the court, followed by Ripple’s Cross-appeal.
The committee served its opening in January 2025 and set Deadlines for answers from Ripple and its managers. Both sides, however moved jointly to hold the profession In Aweyance on 10 April, with reference to an agreement in principle to resolve the case.
That motion, submitted to the second circuit, outlined a settlement framework that the claims of the SEC against Ripple, the counterclaims of the company and the individual charges against Garlinghouse and Larsen would tackle.
The promotion has suspended all deadlines by awaiting further judicial action.
The proposed resolution, jointly submitted by the SEC and the defendants, represents a virtual conclusion of up to more than four years of lawsuits. The parties are now waiting for the first answer from the court to their request for an indicative decision. The submission of the SEC does not set a timeline for the decision of Judge Torres.