Hearing – Coin Network News https://coinnetworknews.com If it's coin, it's news. Thu, 29 Feb 2024 14:22:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 EIA Emergency Survey Preliminary Injuction Hearing Canceled Yesterday https://coinnetworknews.com/eia-emergency-survey-preliminary-injuction-hearing-canceled-yesterday/ https://coinnetworknews.com/eia-emergency-survey-preliminary-injuction-hearing-canceled-yesterday/#respond Thu, 29 Feb 2024 14:22:35 +0000 https://coinnetworknews.com/eia-emergency-survey-preliminary-injuction-hearing-canceled-yesterday/

Yesterday we were supposed to have a hearing on the preliminary injunction in the Texas Blockchain Council v. Department of Energy case. But, as often happens in litigation, things change quickly. Tuesday the judge entered an order canceling today’s hearing based on the parties reaching an “agreement-in-principle” on the overall dispute. This agreement must be finalized and filed by Friday, March 1st.

Speculation time.

What could this mean? One element of the standard for a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO), and a preliminary injunction, is that the party requesting it has to show that they are “likely to succeed on the merits.” This means that the judge has to believe that, not only is success possible, but more likely than not. Here, the judge already agreed that “that Plaintiffs are likely to succeed in showing that the facts alleged by Defendants to support an emergency request fall far short of justifying such an action.” And that the Government’s action was arbitrary, capricious, or abused their discretion.

Losing the TRO, while not dispositive, is a big red flag. The Government does not like to lose, and once it has lost on this metric, it’s very likely that they already know they will lose on the following motions: the preliminary injunction and the permanent injunction.

One problem there is discovery. As part of the process of proving the case, the Plaintiffs get to request internal communications and other materials that might show an abuse of discretion or undue influence. The Energy Information Administration has only used emergency data collection authority in a handful of actual emergencies, such as an emergency survey in response to the 2021 Colonial Pipeline Cyberattack.

Given the context of Senator Warren and the Biden Administration’s continued attacks on Bitcoin and Bitcoin mining, is there any reason to believe that there aren’t unflattering emails or communications showing undue influence between those offices and the EIA? What else could have caused a historically cautious and respected agency to suddenly put out such slipshod work as the EIA-862, which was then rubber stamped by the President’s own Office of Management and Budget in clear technical violation of their internal standards?

It is not like this kind of undue influence hasn’t happened before… look at Custodia Bank’s lawsuit, for instance, where “perhaps the most stunning fact that would never have seen the light of day but for discovery is this: in the wake of FTX’s collapse and a mysterious briefing to Vice-Chair Barr concerning Custodia’s membership and master account applications, Board staff edited and rewrote key parts of an internal Kansas City Fed memo … Discovery reveals that the Board was deeply intertwined in the outcome of Custodia’s master account request. That level of involvement is not consistent with the notion of unfettered Reserve Bank discretion.” Page 54 of Custodia’s December 22, 2023 Brief for Judgment as a Matter of Law.

While we await more information, it seems clear that any voluntary concession by the Government here reveals some combination of realization that they exhibited either manifest incompetence, or that discovery would bear out significant undue influence on the process.

This is a guest post by Colin Crossman. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.

Source link

]]>
https://coinnetworknews.com/eia-emergency-survey-preliminary-injuction-hearing-canceled-yesterday/feed/ 0
U.S. Hearing Highlights Stablecoin Rift in Competing House Bills https://coinnetworknews.com/u-s-hearing-highlights-stablecoin-rift-in-competing-house-bills/ https://coinnetworknews.com/u-s-hearing-highlights-stablecoin-rift-in-competing-house-bills/#respond Fri, 19 May 2023 04:36:57 +0000 https://coinnetworknews.com/u-s-hearing-highlights-stablecoin-rift-in-competing-house-bills/
U.S. lawmakers aren’t yet able to reach across the chasm between Republicans and Democrats’ very different ideas for how to oversee stablecoins, despite notes of hope from both sides evident in a Thursday hearing of the House Financial Services Committee’s digital assets panel.

Source link

]]>
https://coinnetworknews.com/u-s-hearing-highlights-stablecoin-rift-in-competing-house-bills/feed/ 0
US House stablecoin hearing focuses on competing bills for regulation https://coinnetworknews.com/us-house-stablecoin-hearing-focuses-on-competing-bills-for-regulation/ https://coinnetworknews.com/us-house-stablecoin-hearing-focuses-on-competing-bills-for-regulation/#respond Thu, 18 May 2023 18:19:55 +0000 https://coinnetworknews.com/us-house-stablecoin-hearing-focuses-on-competing-bills-for-regulation/

State versus federal regulation was a key issue in the hearing on stablecoins in the United States House of Representatives on May 18. The House Committee on Financial Services’ new Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology and Inclusion heard testimony from five experts as it considered two proposed bills to regulate stablecoins.

There were two draft bills under consideration by the subcommittee. The Republican bill was published in April ahead of a hearing on stablecoin in the Financial Services Committee. Ranking member Maxine Waters later introduced a competing draft based on a bill that was introduced but not passed in the last session of Congress.

The “race to the bottom” was the biggest point of disagreement on state-level stablecoin regulation. The Republican bill would allow stablecoin operators to choose the state they register in, without going through the Federal Reserve Board.

Supporters of the bill argue the floor would prevent the race to the bottom and mirror the U.S. two-tiered federal/state banking regulatory system. Democrats were unconvinced. The Democratic bill preserves access to regulation in federal hands, with the appropriate regulator. David Portilla, partner at Davis Polk & Wardwell, favored a middle road. He said:

“Federal regulation of stablecoin issuers would offer more uniform, consistent rules, whereas state regulation could promote more diversity and innovation in regulation and supervision. The answer to this question need not be binary.”

In any case, current regulations were not suited for stablecoins, he said. Besides a “floor” mechanism for federal involvement in stablecoin regulation for setting minimum standards, there could be a “toggle” based on the size of the issue, he said. The Republican bill would regulate all issuers identically, regardless of size.

Related: Congressional crypto hearing illustrates political stalemate on digital assets

National interest came up repeatedly, with Rep. Brad Sherman, an ardent opponent of cryptocurrency, claiming that a dollar-backed stablecoin would compete with the fiat dollar and undermine it, thus reducing the effectiveness of U.S. sanctions. 

Another stakeholder, Matt Homer of venture capital firm XYZ, said: “stablecoins will happen regardless of whether we want them to happen or not,” adding: “offshore issuers are as free to create dollar-backed stablecoins as U.S. issuers. We should have it done in the U.S. so we can regulate it on our own terms.” Pro-crypto Warren Davidson echoed Homer, saying:

“Often they [stablecoin developers] are fleeing our shores to find certainty. So it would be great if we’d provide some.”

USDF Foundation CEO Robert Morgan spoke in favor of the current regulatory structure and about the advantages of tokenization for traditional banks. He described tokenization as a “third way.”

Magazine: Unstablecoins: Depegging, bank runs and other risks loom