- Two state cases in San Mateo County, brought by plaintiffs Zakinov & Oconer
- Two federal cases in the Northern District of California, brought by Coffey & Greenwald
All four cases are securities class actions.
If you want more details, read the Zakinov complaint:
coindesk.com/another-invest…
Yes, dear XRP hodler, *you* are probably a class member too.
So, if Ripple can resolve *one* class action, it will essentially be done litigating the XRP = security issue with all private plaintiffs (not including the SEC).
Welcome to the class action business. It's mostly (but not entirely) about money: the plaintiffs & lawyers who are *first* to win their case get the biggest reward.
- moved to "relate" the federal cases = would combine Coffey & Greenwald into one
- asked to "coordinate" the state cases = would add efficiencies but state & federal cases go forward separately
The motion was denied last Friday, a small victory for Ripple since they prefer to stay in federal court.
- Coffey, September 20
- Oconer, October 25
- Zakinov, October 26
- Greenwald, November 26
- Greenwald, August 29
- Zakinov, September 7
- Coffey, September 10
- Oconer, ???
All of these deadlines can be extended with court approval.
MTDs are limited in scope, though. They only challenge the "legal sufficiency" of a complaint, but they have to assume all of the factual allegations are true.
- an answer admitting or denying each factual allegation
- a motion for class certification to approve the proposed class
- a motion for summary judgment seeking dismissal based on the evidence
And then Ripple deals with long, costly discovery.
If the case survives, it'll be set for trial, but virtually all class actions settle before reaching a jury.
Sure, Ripple could pull off an early settlement or dismissal, but given how class actions typically work, I doubt it.
As I've mentioned before, the SEC does not make the law. They can only give their opinion, and the courts can decide to agree or not. No matter what the SEC says, these cases will move forward.
The security issue is already pending in the California cases. The SEC can sit back and watch the class action plaintiffs litigate the issue for them; if the plaintiffs win, the SEC can move against XRP later.
Keep in mind that they have limited resources for the #crypto space, and they have their hands full prosecuting ponzi schemes and outright frauds. Staying quiet now may simply be good resource management.
If Ripple wins or settles in California, the SEC could file its own suit in New York & say the west coast got it wrong. This wouldn't be improper.
They're clearly geared up for a fight. From what I can tell, it may be a long one.