The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ex-Atlanta mayor to help advise crypto exchange

Keisha Lance Bottoms joins Coinbase Global Advisory Council.

- By Mirtha Donastorg mirtha.donastorg@ajc.com

Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms is joining the global advisory council of Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurr­ency exchanges in the world.

She will help advise the company on how to create more equitable financial systems as well as be a voice to the public and lawmakers on cryptocurr­ency. The paid appointmen­t comes a little over a year after she left her role as a senior advisor in the Biden administra­tion.

“I think it’s important that in our communitie­s that we have representa­tion in areas that we aren’t normally seen,” Bottoms said. “When our communitie­s have an interest, it’s important that we also have a voice at the table.”

The vast majority of Americans who are aware of cryptocurr­encies doubt their safety, said a 2023 Pew Research Survey, and the fraud and failure of the exchange FTX has haunted the industry.

That same Pew survey found fewer than 20% of American

Former Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, who also worked in the Biden administra­tion, will advise Coinbase, a cryptocurr­ency exchange, on equitable financial systems and advocate for alternativ­e currencies to the public and lawmakers.

adults have invested in, traded or used crypto. But among minorities, 21% of Black or Hispanic adults said they had used it compared to 14% of white adults.

Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa also is joining the council, the Los Angeles Times reported. Bottoms and Villaraigo­sa will join nine other members appointed over the past year, including former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper,

former U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey, a Republican from Pennsylvan­ia, and George Osborne, former Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom.

Bottoms’ experience as a leader in Atlanta and in the White House was why Coinbase decided to tap her for the council, said Faryar Shirzad, chief policy officer at Coinbase and one of the main executives who works with the advisory council.

“She’s very much of a national leader, has her finger on the pulse of the American people in a way that we thought would be important to help us as we navigate kind of our growth across the country,” Shirzad said.

The global advisory council meets virtually every other week and will meet in person sometime this summer, Shirzad said. The online meetings typically include an innovator or business leader in the crypto community speaking with councilmem­bers.

“The biggest thing we want from the advisers is people who want to learn about crypto so they can talk about it more fluidly,” Shirzad said.

Bottoms admits her first experience with cryptocurr­ency wasn’t a positive one. When she was mayor in March 2018, the city of Atlanta’s computer network was held hostage by attackers demanding a ransom of $51,000 in Bitcoin in exchange for regaining control of the systems.

But in the years since, Bottoms said, she came to realize how popular cryptocurr­ency was among Atlantans and young people. When presented with the opportunit­y to join the council, she ran it past her children first.

“Have you ever heard of this Coinbase? What do you think of it?” she said she asked them. “And they were actually excited about it.”

The crypto industry recently has come under more scrutiny by federal regulators, particular­ly after the collapse of the cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX. Sam Bankman-Fried, the exchange’s founder, was sentenced to 25 years in prison last month after he was found guilty of fraud and conspiracy.

Other exchanges, including Coinbase, have been in the crosshairs of regulators. Last June, the Securities and Exchange Commission charged Coinbase with operating as an unregister­ed broker and exchange. The company has been fighting the civil lawsuit.

Shirzad said the regulatory landscape around crypto is “developing.”

“We need more clarity and I think we’re very confident that we’ll get it over time, whether it’s in the courts or through legislatio­n,” he said. “But it’s a process and we’re kind of committed to it.”

 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC 2024 ??
JASON GETZ/AJC 2024

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