Coinbase Escalates SEC Fight Over the Agency's Inside Chatter on ETH

  • A firm hired intends to ask a judge for a quick call on whether it should get key documents that might reveal how the agency came to view crypto as .
  • The federal court could decide whether the company (and the public) get to see what the SEC officials said in private discussions as they tried to figure out whether like ETH should be counted as securities.

An intermediary for the biggest U.S. crypto exchange, Coinbase Inc. (COIN), is cranking up its legal fight over the Securities and Exchange Commission's unwillingness to produce documents revealing the regulator's internal thinking on whether to pursue 's ether (ETH) and other tokens as illegal securities.

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Coinbase hired History Associates Inc. to pursue SEC communications under the Freedom of Information Act – a process that initially concluded with the agency denying the request by citing that the documents were connected to an ongoing investigation. Coinbase's hired gun eventually sued over the denial, and History Associates is preparing to ask the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to force the hand of the agency, which has since suggested the reason for its initial denial may no longer be valid.

“Lacking reasonable alternatives, History Associates intends to move for partial summary

judgment on the SEC-generated documents,” the company said in a notice filed on Monday with the court, detailing that plan to ask for a court ruling.

A spokesperson for the SEC told CoinDesk the agency declines to comment “beyond our public filings.”

“Over a year ago we made FOIA requests aimed at files on ETH 2.0 and other mysteries,” Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal said in a posting on X, arguing that the internal agency communications “belong to all of us,” not the SEC. “We then sued to end their stall, only to get an entirely new set of excuses.”

Read More: Coinbase Accuses U.S. SEC, FDIC of Improperly Blocking Document Requests

Coinbase has been conducting a multi-front legal fight with the SEC, including battling over an SEC enforcement action that accused the company of running an illegal securities business, a petition by the company to force the agency to make crypto-specific regulations and this conflict over whether insider messages on the SEC's crypto thinking should be subject to public review. These disputes could – in the absence of swift congressional action – eventually form some legal foundation for how the digital assets may proceed in the U.S.

Edited by Nikhilesh De.

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