The United States SEC might be investigated for a “haphazard and heavy-handed approach to digital assets.” with crypto platform Prometheum.
On July 13, U.S. Representative Ritchie Torres filed requests to the SEC’s Inspector General Deborah Jeffrey and the Government Accountability Office’s Comptroller General Gene Dodaro. In the letters published by Torres on Twitter, he writes:
“The SEC refuses to bring even the barest amount of clarity to the application of securities law to digital assets. Its preferred means of communicating is neither rule nor guidance but enforcement.”
Torres emphasizes the SEC’s May decision to grant a particular broker purpose dealer (SPBD) license to Prometheum, a digital assets platform created in 2017 by two U.S. financial attorneys.
According to Torres, “Prometheum appears to be nothing more than a Potemkin platform, operating as a timely talking point for crypto critics rather than a true trading platform for crypto customers.”
He calls for examining the SEC’s failure to create “a workable process for registering” digital assets platforms and “the unusual backdoor deal” for Prometheum.
Prometheum recently became a public enemy in the crypto industry, and Torres’ demand for investigation is not the first. The company was thrust into the spotlight after its co-founder, Aaron Kaplan, testified before Congress in June. The problem seems to be Kaplan’s general support of the SEC’s regulatory strategy under current securities laws.
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Immediately after the hearing, theories about Prometheum started swirling on Twitter, emphasizing its possible ties to Chinese investors.
On June 15, the Blockchain Association filed a request with the SEC, seeking information about the company. Six U.S. lawmakers called the SEC in July to investigate Prometheum’s “ties to the Chinese Communist Party.”