How an Appeals Court Ruled on an Aspiring Class-Action Lawsuit Against Binance (2024)

A federal appeals court ruled last week that Binance needs to face a putative class-action lawsuit from a group of U.S.-based crypto investors who allege the exchange allowed them to buy and trade unregistered securities in the form of certain cryptocurrencies. The ruling doesn't make a determination on whether the tokens are indeed securities or not, but it's significant in broader securities cases nonetheless.

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The narrative

An appeals court revived a putative class-action lawsuit filed by a group of crypto investors against Binance last week, ruling that a district judge had erred in dismissing the case as being filed in the wrong jurisdiction and after the statute of limitations had expired.

Why it matters

Binance spent a few years claiming it was headquartered nowhere, an argument the appeals court judges did not find compelling. The judges ruled that domestic securities laws still apply to transactions on exchanges based outside the U.S., which will have far-reaching implications (for example: the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's suit against the exchange). It's also worth noting that this is an appeals court ruling, giving it greater weight (as a precedent) than a mere district court ruling.

Breaking it down

Last week, an appeals court ruled that a crypto exchange, even if it says it isn't based in the U.S., may still be subject to U.S. laws if there's enough of a connection to the U.S. In a putative class action lawsuit filed against global crypto exchange Binance, that nexus turned out to be just sufficient enough that a trio of judges found a group of crypto investors had enough standing to bring a lawsuit against the exchange.

There were two main aspects to the ruling. One addresses timeliness, while the other addresses extraterritoriality (a word I have, so far, been unable to pronounce).

Judges Pierre N. Leval, Denny Chin and Alison J. Nathan applied another court precedent, Morrison v. National Australia Bank, to say that the factors that matter are where the users placed the trades, where they paid for them and where they took on the terms of service – in the case of the plaintiffs in this suit, that's within various U.S. states.

"First, Plaintiffs have adequately alleged that their claims involved domestic transactions because they became irrevocable within the United States and are therefore subject to our securities laws," the judges said. "Second, Plaintiffs’ federal claims are timely insofar as they relate to transactions that occurred during the year before they filed suit because their federal claims all require a completed transaction and therefore could not have accrued before the transactions were made. Finally, we vacate as premature the district court’s conclusion that there was an insufficient nexus between the named Plaintiffs’ claims and the states whose laws govern the claims of putative absent class members."

The fact that there is no non-U.S. jurisdiction for the plaintiffs to sue in also bolstered their case, the judges seemed to indicate. And the same arguments support the role of state law claims, the judges wrote.

"We conclude that, at this early stage of the litigation, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that matching occurred in the United States," the ruling said.

Binance tried to argue that it was a decentralized exchange and therefore U.S. courts did not have jurisdiction. The judges did not agree. Further down, they added that the plaintiffs also made a compelling argument that the token orders were placed within the U.S. because of where Binance's servers are.

"We conclude that the complaint plausibly alleges that matching occurred on 'the infrastructure Binance relies on to operate its exchange,'" the ruling said – in this case, Amazon Web Services servers in California.

The judges also ruled that the plaintiffs had plausibly alleged that they filed the suit within the statute of limitations, which did not begin until they actually bought the tokens in question.

Attorneys with the SEC have already filed the ruling as supplemental authority in the regulator's own case against Binance to dispute arguments Binance and founder Changpeng Zhao made to support their motion to dismiss.

"Binance and Zhao cited a district court’s dismissal of a private securities class action against them, Anderson v. Binance, in support of their dismissal arguments here," the filing said, adding the opinion as an exhibit.

  • COPA v. Wright: What's at Stake as the Trial to Determine Satoshi's Identity Wraps Up

    : Attorneys representing a group of bitcoin developers and companies in the sector have battled with attorneys representing Craig Wright over whether or not he really is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. If the industry group wins, they'll try and block Wright from suing or claiming intellectual property rights over Bitcoin in future. If he wins, he'll have a leg up in future suits.

  • U.S. President Again Proposes Crypto Mining Tax, 'Wash Sale Rule' for Digital Assets in New Budget

    : The White House is proposing including an excise mining tax, wash sale rule and mark-to-market rule in its fiscal year 2025 budget. The

    U.S. Treasury Department's Greenbook

    has more information on the proposals, but the topline figure is a projection of $10 billion generated in 2025 and $42 billion over the next decade. However, similar proposals in last year's budget were not adopted, and it's unclear how likely it is Congress will take up these proposals in upcoming budget bills.

  • Coinbase Accuses U.S. SEC of Breaking the Law in Rejecting Crypto Rulemaking

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How an Appeals Court Ruled on an Aspiring Class-Action Lawsuit Against Binance (1)

Tuesday

  • 10:00 UTC (10:00 a.m. GMT) Attorneys representing the Crypto Open Patent Alliance

    kicked off closing arguments

    in their case against Craig Wright.

Friday

  • The Department of Justice will file its own briefs on Sam Bankman-Fried's sentencing.

  • (

    The Wall Street Journal

    ) Binance Head of Financial Crime Compliance Tigran Gambaryan and regional manager for Africa Nadeem Anjarwalla were detained by Nigerian authorities, seemingly because the country is blaming Binance and crypto more broadly for a local currency crisis.

  • (

    The Daily Beast

    ) It is true that commercial flights

    are safer now

    than at any point in history. It's also true that despite this, there's usually incidents happening pretty frequently (check out

    VASAviation

    on YouTube, for example). And it's especially true that United Airlines just had a pretty unfortunate week, with seven different flights having to divert or get stuck. This includes a flight last week when an engine suffered

    a compressor stall

    (a United spokesperson sent me a statement saying the engine sucked in bubble wrap), another flight where

    a tire fell off a plane

    on departure and a third where a plane

    skidded off the runway

    , apparently because it tried make a turn faster than usual while the runway was slick. I'm not sure the extent to which this is an artifact of people just paying more attention (there are

    a lot of flights

    every day) vs. United just having

    a spectacularly poor week

    . Also worth noting: None of these incidents were fatal.

  • (

    The New York Times

    ) Boeing and Spirit Aerosystems, which manufactures fuselages and other components for both Boeing and Airbus, failed several audits (33/89 for Boeing, 6/13 for Spirit) conducted by the Federal Aviation Administration over a six-week period, the Times reports. (Disclosure: I hold Airbus ADRs.)

  • (

    Puck News

    ) Block (formerly Square) CEO and Twitter (now X) founder Jack Dorsey intended to donate $5 million in bitcoin to Robert Kennedy, who's now mounting a third-party bid for President.

How an Appeals Court Ruled on an Aspiring Class-Action Lawsuit Against Binance (2)

If you’ve got thoughts or questions on what I should discuss next week or any other feedback you’d like to share, feel free to email me at nik@coindesk.com or find me on Twitter @nikhileshde.

You can also join the group conversation on Telegram.

See ya’ll next week!

Edited by Danny Nelson.

How an Appeals Court Ruled on an Aspiring Class-Action Lawsuit Against Binance (2024)

FAQs

How an Appeals Court Ruled on an Aspiring Class-Action Lawsuit Against Binance? ›

An appeals court revived a putative class-action lawsuit filed by a group of crypto investors against Binance last week, ruling that a district judge had erred in dismissing the case as being filed in the wrong jurisdiction and after the statute of limitations had expired.

What is the Binance controversy? ›

Binance has been asked to identify and report tens of thousands of suspicious activity transactions the Treasury Department accused the company of ignoring in the past. As part of Binance's settlement, the Justice Department monitorship is set to last for three years and the FinCEN one for five.

What are the ethical issues with Binance? ›

The charges stated Binance had lax anti-money laundering procedures in place and customers were able to mix illicit services and "laundered proceeds of the darknet market transactions, hacks, ransomware and scams." The indictment also said, "because of this scheme, Binance prioritized growth, market share and profits ...

Does Binance do money laundering? ›

Binance agreed to pay more than $4 billion in fines and other penalties as part of a coordinated settlement with the federal government last fall. The company admitted to engaging in anti-money laundering activities, unlicensed money transmitting and sanctions violations.

What is the class action lawsuit on Coinbase? ›

The proposed class-action lawsuit seeks damages arising from the sale or soliciting of 79 digital assets that the consumers say amounted to illegal contracts because the platform is not registered with the SEC.

How safe is Binance now? ›

Is Binance Exchange Safe? Binance is often considered one of the safest exchanges in the world if you consider the level of security. If the exchange crashed or a hacker stole assets or funds, the SAFU reimburses its users from the $1 billion fund. Not every platform has an insurance fund in place.

Why is Binance being banned? ›

The SEC said in a press release on Monday that the exchange's online pages were found to have offered an investment and trading platform without the necessary license from the financial watchdog.

What was the outcome of the Binance lawsuit? ›

Beyond the Courtroom: The Wider Regulatory Scene

For instance, the U.S. Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and other U.S. agencies reached a $4.3 billion settlement with Binance last November to resolve the anti-money laundering cases brought against the company.

What is the legal action against Binance? ›

An appeals court revived a putative class-action lawsuit filed by a group of crypto investors against Binance last week, ruling that a district judge had erred in dismissing the case as being filed in the wrong jurisdiction and after the statute of limitations had expired.

Why is Binance under investigation? ›

Treasury secretary Janet Yellen said US financial regulators had been investigating Binance for more than three years and found that it had engaged in “consistent and egregious violations” of US law that “allowed illicit actors to transact freely” on the platform and “supporting activities from child sexual abuse, to ...

In which countries is Binance banned? ›

COUNTRY WHOSE BAN THE TRADING ON BINANCE
  • Ontario (Canada)
  • China.
  • Europe (for derivatives trading)
  • Malaysia.
  • Japan.
  • UK.
  • Thailand.
  • #TrendingTopic #BTC.
Feb 28, 2024

Who is the head of financial crime in Binance? ›

Binance's head of financial crime compliance Tigran Gambaryan reportedly pleaded not guilty to money laundering charges in a Nigerian high court on Monday before he was remanded pending trial.

Is it safe to transfer money from Binance to bank account? ›

Binance is one of the safest and most secure cryptocurrency exchanges, but you still shouldn't keep your money there for long. After all, we've seen enough cryptocurrencies and crypto exchanges crash to know that the best option is always keeping your funds, whether crypto or fiat, in your possession.

Can you really get money from a class action lawsuit? ›

If your class action lawsuit is successful, you will receive a portion of the settlement or court award. Plaintiffs are paid by a lump-sum payment or a structured settlement. Smaller payouts are usually dispersed as a single payment.

Should I claim class action lawsuit? ›

Is It Worth It to Join a Class Action Lawsuit? This depends on the facts of your individual case. You might benefit from becoming a lead plaintiff in a highly important case that causes policy changes in the future. Or, you might end up as one of many plaintiffs, contributing to the greater uniformity of the claim.

What happens when a class action lawsuit is settled? ›

Typically, after a class action settles, a settlement website will be launched. This website address will be included in the settlement notice. In most cases, class members will be required to complete a claims form through the website to receive their portion of the settlement proceeds.

Was Binance banned in US? ›

BINANCE BANNED IN THE UNITED STATES. The Chinese based company BINANCE founded in China in 2017 has since stopped it's major operations in the United States and stopped accepting US users since 2019.

Does Binance have a good reputation? ›

Binance.US rates highly on the security of its exchange. For instance, crypto exchange security review site CER ranked Binance.US as one of the most secure exchanges as of October 2022, ahead of big names like Coinbase and Gemini.

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