Lawyer Gives Reasons Why The SEC Won’t Drag Ripple Founders Through A Trial | Bitcoinist.com

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There have been speculations that the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) could drag Ripple Labs’ founders into the regulator’s long-running legal battle against their company. However, pro-XRP legal expert Fred Rispoli has outlined why this is unlikely.
SEC Unlikely To Sue Ripple Founders
Rispoli stated in a tweet that the SEC is unlikely to pursue a trial against Ripple’s CEO Brad Garlinghouse and Executive Chairman Chris Larsen for “many reasons.” 

The agency had accused Ripple Labs of selling unregistered securities back in 2020. But although it highlighted Garlinghouse and Larsen as integral to the wrongdoing, it never brought an action specifically against the duo.
It is not unusual for the SEC to bring actions against top executives whenever it files a suit against a defaulting company. In April this year, the Commission sued crypto exchange Bittrex and its former CEO, William Shihara, for operating an unregistered securities exchange.
However, Rispoli believes that the SEC only threatened a lawsuit against Garlinghouse and Larsen to pressure the company into a “weak settlement position” and did not intend to maintain a suit against them. 
He noted that the trial was also unlikely as the SEC would not want a situation where its credibility is questioned, which he believes could happen if former SEC Chair Jay Clayton and former SEC Director William Hinman are called to the witness stand.
Rispoli’s position may have something to do with the Himman documents, highlighting the agency’s questionable practices and possibly corruption. It is believed that Himman may have been influenced by external forces when he stated that Ether was not a security.

XRP price ranging at $0.52 | Source: XRPUSDT on Tradingview.com 
SEC Has A Weak Case
As part of his arguments as to why the SEC is unlikely to sue Garlinghouse and Larsen, Rispoli stated that the Commission will find it hard to prove that the executives were reckless in terms of institutional sales as they can raise a defense that these sales were programmatic (something which Judge Torres had

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