Here’s what happened in crypto today
19 März 2025 - 8:08PM
Cointelegraph


Today in crypto, the United States Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) dropped its multi-year enforcement action against
Ripple. Crypto lawyer John Deaton chimed in on the development,
telling Cointelegraph that the SEC’s allegation that XRP
(XRP) is a security
is dead in its tracks. Meanwhile, an initially crypto-skeptic
Minnesota Senator introduced a Bitcoin-buying bill.
SEC’s failed case against Ripple is proof XRP is not a security
— John Deaton
Crypto lawyer and former Massachusetts Senate candidate John
Deaton said the SEC’s failed
lawsuit against Ripple is the final death knell in its claim
that the XRP token is a security.
In an interview with Cointelegraph, Deaton said the XRP token is
a digital commodity, not a security. After the SEC decided to drop
its case against Ripple, the blockchain company will have the
opportunity to renegotiate the $125-million judgment against it,
said Deaton.
“Everything’s turned,” since the election of Donald Trump, said
Deaton. “The election’s turned, the industry turned, the SEC [has]
completely done a 180 as it relates to the industry. Why should we
pay $125 million?”
Earlier in the day,
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse called the regulator’s XRP
reversal a “victory for the industry and the beginning of a new
chapter.”
SEC will drop its appeal against Ripple, CEO Garlinghouse
says
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission’s
multi-year enforcement action
against Ripple from 2021 is finally coming to an end, according
to the company CEO.
“This is it — the moment we’ve been waiting for. The SEC will
drop its appeal — a resounding victory for Ripple, for crypto,
every way you look at it,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse wrote on X
on March 19.
Source: Brad
Garlinghouse
“I’m finally able to announce that the case has ended; it’s
over,” Garlinghouse said in the attached video to the X post.
Minnesota senator proposes Bitcoin Act after going from skeptic
to believer
Minnesota state Senator Jeremy Miller
introduced the Minnesota Bitcoin Act on March 17 to allow the
state to invest in Bitcoin (BTC) and other
cryptocurrencies, which he drafted after completely changing his
stance on the space.
“As I do more research on cryptocurrency and hear from more and
more constituents, I’ve gone from being highly skeptical to
learning more about it, to believing in Bitcoin and other
cryptocurrencies,” Miller said in a statement announcing the
bill.
Several other US states have introduced similar Bitcoin-buying
bills, with 23 states having introduced legislation to create a
Bitcoin reserve, likely influenced by Senator Cynthia Lummis’
Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Act, which would see the federal
government buy 1 million Bitcoin.
A total of 39 different bills related to state investments
in Bitcoin have been introduced across 23 US states. Source:
Bitcoin Laws
The bill would allow the Minnesota State Board of Investment to
invest state assets in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. State
employees would be able to add Bitcoin and crypto to their
retirement accounts, and Minnesotans would be given the option to
pay state taxes and fees with Bitcoin, among other measures.
...
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