Chattanooga Times Free Press

Winklevoss twins, Genesis target of SEC crackdown

- BY KEN SWEET

The Securities and Exchange Commission went after two prominent companies in the crypto community, alleging Genesis Global Capital and the crypto exchange Gemini were selling unregister­ed securities through a popular program that was supposed to give high-interest payments on crypto deposits.

The SEC’s lawsuit Thursday against Gemini, which is run by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss who are sometimes better known for being the disputed creators of Facebook, and Genesis is part of a broader cryptocurr­ency crackdown by multiple U.S. government agencies after crypto prices fell sharply last year, exposing mostly retail investors to billions of dollars in losses.

Tyler Winklevoss called the suit a “parking ticket” and vowed to defend the company.

The lawsuit involves a program known as Gemini Earn, which allowed individual­s to deposit their cryptocurr­encies in turn for a high interest rate, as much as 4.29%. Gemini and Genesis would then lend out those cryptocurr­encies to other investors.

But the collapse of crypto prices last year has put many of the crypto lenders out of business, into bankruptcy, or caused them to dramatical­ly pull back on their business. Voyager Digital, Celsius and FTX — whose founder was criminally charged last month — were all platforms that did various forms of deposit-and-lending operations.

The SEC alleges Gemini Earn was effectivel­y an offer and sale of securities and the program should have been registered with U.S. authoritie­s. Further, as crypto prices collapsed, Genesis had to freeze withdrawal­s from its Gemini Earn program and customers are now out around $900 million, according to the SEC.

The SEC under Chairman Gary Gensler has argued for some time that they have the legal authority to regulate crypto, and they have largely used their lawsuit and enforcemen­t powers to do so.

“Today’s charges build on previous actions to make clear to the marketplac­e and the investing public that crypto lending platforms and other intermedia­ries need to comply with our time-tested securities laws,” Gensler said in a statement.

The cryptocurr­ency industry, its lobbyists and friends in Congress have pushed back hard on the SEC, and have largely been pushing for the smaller Commodity Futures Trading Commission to oversee crypto.

Tyler Winklevoss said on Twitter the Gemini Earn program was regulated by the New York Department of Financial Services and they had been in conversati­ons with the SEC about Earn for more than a year-and-a-half. He said the SEC did not have issues with the Earn program until withdrawal­s were paused in November during the aftermath of the FTX bankruptcy.

“We look forward to defending ourselves against this manufactur­ed parking ticket,” Winklevoss said. “And we will make sure this doesn’t distract us from the important recovery work we are doing.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK ?? The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission glimmers in the sun in 2015 at SEC headquarte­rs in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK The seal of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission glimmers in the sun in 2015 at SEC headquarte­rs in Washington.

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