In a candid 60-second video, Rippleâs Chief Legal Officer Stuart Alderoty explained that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissionâs decision to drop Rippleâs case underscores a change in the regulatorâs approach to cryptocurrency enforcement.
âThe SEC has not only dropped its appeal against Ripple, theyâve now dropped every case against every crypto company in the United States,â Alderoty stated.
Alderoty says the SEC has finally acknowledged what the crypto industry has long argued. Enforcement actions cannot be brought without first establishing clear regulatory guidelines.
âYou canât bring enforcement actions for violating the law without first explaining what the law is,â he emphasized.
Alderoty pointed to the absence of clear laws, rules, and regulations regarding cryptocurrency in the U.S.
Throughout its legal spat, Ripple maintained that the SEC was attempting to regulate through enforcement rather than proper rulemaking.
The case began in December 2020 and centered on whether XRP should be classified as a security. It became one of the crypto industryâs most closely watched cases.
With the legal obstacles now cleared, Alderoty shared Rippleâs forward-looking strategy.
âWeâre going to clean up the mess, weâre going to get out of the courtroom, weâre going to get back to running business,â he said. The company plans to work with Congress to bring smart crypto regulation that âprotects consumers, protects the integrity of the market, keeps bad actors out, and most importantly, allows innovation to flourish.â
In 2023, the court gave Ripple a partial win: institutional sales were legal, but XRP sales on public exchanges did violate securities laws. Ripple originally set aside $125 million in escrow for potential penalties, which CEO Brad Garlinghouse promised to take back.
âI think itâs just evidence that the former [Gary] Gensler SEC was on the wrong side of the law. And thanks to the new leadership at the SEC and in the White House,â Garlinghouse recently told Fox Business.
The timing of this legal resolution aligns with Rippleâs aggressive expansion plans. The company recently completed its largest acquisition with the purchase of Hidden Road for $1.25 billion.
Alderotyâs and Garlinghouseâs comments come as the SEC finds itself under new leadership. Trump appointee Paul Atkins is now chair, and the agencyâs withdrawal of all crypto enforcement cases is a recognition that its approach to cryptocurrency oversight has fundamentally changed.
Itâs worth noting that Ripple supported President Trump by donating millions to his presidential campaign and at least $5 million in XRP tokens to the inauguration on Jan. 20.