Ripple and SEC tried to call a truce but Judge Torres wants it by the book

- Judge Torres shut down Ripple and the SECās attempt to quietly slash the firm’s fine and end the case early.
- The judge is forcing both parties to do it by the book with no easy exits after five years of legal warfare.
- Ripple is moving forward and testing XRP Ledger in Colombia to boost farmer incomes with Mercy Corps.
Judge Analisa Torres denied a joint motion from Ripple and the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Both parties had tried to sneak through a motion asking the court to agree on their settlement. This move could have dissolved Rippleās 2024 injunction and slashed its $125 million fine down to $25 million.
Commenters suggested that Judge Torres isnāt here for the easy exit, and sheās playing hardball as the long-running legal dispute is finally ending. The courtās order seems to have disrupted Rippleās party as XRP price took a dip of 4% over the last 24 hours after witnessing an upward rally.
Ripple-SEC truce hits legal snag
Eleanor Terrett, former Fox Business journalist, in a post stated that after speaking with three legal sources, she reads that Judge Torres is not making it easy for the SEC and Ripple to simply walk away. Sheās forcing both sides to earn their way out, not just wave the white flag and move on.
Pro-crypto lawyer and amicus curiae in the XRP lawsuit, John Deaton, raised a valid point, which suggests that from Torresās perspective, the watchdog has spent years digging in on XRP being a security. This has resulted in a legal strategy that has required thousands of hours of legal and judicial manpower, just for the agency to suggest that those five years were essentially a waste.
Judge Torres might have denied their initial request, but she has also outlined a clear path forward. If Ripple and the SEC can meet the actual legal standards and convince her this do-over is in the public interest, especially for XRPās institutional buyers, then maybe she reconsiders.
Rippleās Chief Legal Officer, Stuart Alderoty, mentioned that the firm will work with the commission to revisit the issue together. He noted that nothing in the order changes Rippleās wins that XRP is not a security. However, he has been on the opposite side for around five years. Itāll be crucial to see if the judge eases up once they have done the necessary work, or she makes this more of a āpolitical fight,ā added Terrett.
Rippleās $125M fine stands
The August 2024 ruling had barred Ripple from unlawful securities sales. Ripple and the SEC were trying to undo that and negotiate a lighter penalty, but the court basically said, āFile it properly, or donāt file it at all.ā
This all goes back to the SECās 2020 lawsuit accusing the XRP issuer of selling $1.3 billion in unregistered XRP securities. The game changed in July 2023, when Torres ruled XRP sales to institutions broke the law, but retail sales didnāt.
On the market side, XRP price was riding on an upward wave until the recent order landed in the legal fight. Despite the recent dip, XRP is still up by 16% in the last 30 days and is trading at an average price of $2.41 at press time.
Ripple has been expanding its scope after a US court bagged them a partial win. The blockchain company announced its collaboration with Mercy Corps Ventures as part of its Unlocking Opportunity initiative. The partnership with WĆIA will leverage the XRP Ledger to test how blockchain traceability could boost incomes for 300 smallholder farmers in Colombia.
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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Ashish Kumar
Ashish Kumar is a crypto and financial journalist with eight years of newsroom experience. He covers whatās happening with crypto markets, regulation, DeFi, and exchange ecosystems. He has worked with Coingape, Todayq, and Newsroompost. Ashish holds a PGDP in English Journalism from the IIMC. He has also interviewed industry figures including Arthur Hayes, Yat Siu, Austin Federa, and more.
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