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usonian

(26,595 posts)
Fri Nov 25, 2022, 01:37 AM Nov 2022

Congressmembers Tried to Stop the SEC's Inquiry Into FTX (added piece by Cory Doctorow)

Last edited Sat Nov 26, 2022, 01:07 AM - Edit history (1)

https://prospect.org/power/congressmembers-tried-to-stop-secs-inquiry-into-ftx/
The ‘Blockchain Eight’ wrote a bipartisan letter in March attempting to chill the SEC’s information requests to crypto firms. FTX was one of those firms.


The Securities and Exchange Commission was seeking information from collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX earlier this year, the Prospect has confirmed, bringing a new perspective to an effort by a bipartisan group of congressmembers to slow down that investigation. The March letter from eight House members—four Democrats and four Republicans—questioned the SEC’s authority to make informal inquiries to crypto and blockchain companies, and intimated that the requests violated federal law.

Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN), whom the Republican caucus just elected as majority whip, the number three position in the House GOP leadership, led the letter. In a contemporaneous Twitter thread, Emmer wrote: “My office has received numerous tips from crypto and blockchain firms that SEC Chair @GaryGensler’s information reporting ‘requests’ to the crypto community are overburdensome, don’t feel particularly … voluntary … and are stifling innovation.”

We now know that FTX was one of those firms receiving information requests from the SEC, about the very activities that have brought down the firm. This raises the question of whether Emmer and the other congressmembers were acting on behalf of FTX (which has been credibly accused of snatching customer money to make risky bets) to try to chill an ongoing investigation from an independent regulatory and law enforcement agency.

More consequentially, Emmer was the head of the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign arm for House Republicans, this year. The NRCC’s associated super PAC, the Congressional Leadership Fund, received $2.75 million from FTX in the 2022 cycle; $2 million from Salame in late September, and $750,000 from the company’s political action committee. That money helped House Republicans win the majority in 2022. Though FTX has been portrayed as a Democratic firm, thanks to the high profile of former co-CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, the company sprinkled around campaign donations fairly evenly, with a shade over 50 percent going directly to congressional Republicans and a shade under 50 percent to Democrats this cycle.


The request is posted here:
https://emmer.house.gov/_cache/files/0/c/0c7fc863-7916-4b19-bc44-52bef772287e/9B0B9D1CA9B3C215DDC762DF5B0F6864.3.16.22.emmer.sec.letter.pdf

And here are the signers.


The site puts up a giant nag-wall, demanding your email address etc.
Any "reader/readability tool" such as the one in Firefox (which I used here) and Safari should bypass the nag.
In any event, it's archived here
https://archive.ph/KeNum

A lot of sports figures are in hot water over the FTX fiasco, promoting a risky bet.
Of course, if a company can buy congresspeople, does that make it less risky? (NO)

Pluralistic: 23 Nov 2022 Citizens United and the FTX meltdown: The Keating Five were amateurs.
https://pluralistic.net/2022/11/23/incentives-matter/

SBF's reputation as a boy-wonder genius investor wasn't the result of the returns to Alameda, but rather, the seemingly limitless funds that Alameda could tap into for more failed investments. Those funds, we now know, were stolen from FTX's retail customers. This is exactly the kind of thing that an SEC investigation could have revealed.

The vast sums of (real) money the crypto industry pumped into electoral politics is closely related to its bull run – campaign contributions muzzled finance watchdogs, which let the industry defraud the public, which gave it more money for campaign contributions.

This is a completely foreseeable outcome of unlimited campaign finance, especially the "dark money" finance that the 2010 Citizens United decision unleashed. CU removed the final barrier to massive influence campaigns by the ultra-rich, who poured money into the political system.

This slavish belief in incentives is why would-be aristocrats like Sam Walton prohibited his executives from taking so much as a glass of water from vendors' salesmen, lest they become tempted into favoring the salesman's commissions over Walmart's profits. But these exact same people profess a belief in unlimited political spending as a means to better governance. Somehow, a glass of water will corrupt a corporate buyer, but a $100m super-PAC donation will have no impact on the judgment of an elected official.
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Congressmembers Tried to Stop the SEC's Inquiry Into FTX (added piece by Cory Doctorow) (Original Post) usonian Nov 2022 OP
Stifling Innovation, I think that means... Captain Zero Nov 2022 #1
An Anti-Corruption Act is badly needed in money-soaked American corrupt to the core politics. Alexander Of Assyria Nov 2022 #2
Good Info modrepub Nov 2022 #3
Bipartisanship at its best The Mouth Nov 2022 #4
Kick for update. usonian Nov 2022 #5
Nature of the free market in my book. Play at you're own risk, no whining. nt Hotler Nov 2022 #6

Captain Zero

(8,954 posts)
1. Stifling Innovation, I think that means...
Fri Nov 25, 2022, 04:12 AM
Nov 2022

FTX Can't run the pump and dump securities scam as long as they want.

modrepub

(4,194 posts)
3. Good Info
Fri Nov 25, 2022, 11:10 AM
Nov 2022

The chatter out there is FTX is a big exclusive Dem Party supporter. BS as usual; M$M never seems to bother calling out the lies.

The Mouth

(3,416 posts)
4. Bipartisanship at its best
Fri Nov 25, 2022, 12:22 PM
Nov 2022

/s

All 8 should be impeached and removed, and we should censure anyone who took money from FTX.

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