The further the Ripple v. SEC lawsuit gets dragged on, the more straightforward and blunt Ripple’s responses to the SEC become. Just a few hours ago at the time of this articles publication Ripple filed a two-page response to the SEC’s objection against the I-Remit & TapJets amicus briefs in support of Ripple. Ironically enough, in the early days of the Ripple v. SEC lawsuit the SEC was caught red handed by the court reaching out to Ripple’s overseas customers that had nothing to do with the country in which the lawsuit resides.
However, now that Ripple is bringing in their own customers within the United States to support them in the lawsuit by making statements about how they leverage XRP for their business model, now the SEC wants them removed from the case. Just like the chamber of digital commerce and John Deaton who was representing 70,000 XRP holders in the case.
Key statement: “If the SEC cannot evaluate the veracity of such claims then it had no business bringing this litigation in the first place.”
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