FDIC抵制关于“扼杀行动2.0”的透明度;Coinbase首席法律官表示
FDIC Resists Transparency On Operation Chokepoint 2.0; Coinbase CLO Says

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/crypto/fdic-resists-transparency-operation-chokepoint-20-coinbase-clo-says

Coinbase首席法律官保罗·格里沃尔指责美国政府机构,特别是联邦存款保险公司(FDIC),拒绝就其在“扼杀行动2.0”(Operation Chokepoint 2.0)中的角色保持透明。据称,这项行动是在拜登政府时期发起的,旨在切断加密货币和科技公司获得银行服务的渠道。这起事件紧随2023年初几家加密货币友好型银行倒闭以及政府向银行施压,要求其与加密货币公司断绝关系的指控之后。尽管监管政策有所转变,特朗普总统也曾誓言要结束“扼杀行动2.0”,但格里沃尔声称,FDIC拒绝充分配合Coinbase根据《信息自由法》(FOIA)提出的文件请求,对信息进行涂黑处理,并拒绝作证。Coinbase还向美国证券交易委员会(SEC)提交了关于对加密货币公司调查的FOIA请求。特朗普此前曾签署行政命令,旨在减轻Web3公司在银行业务方面面临的挑战,并将美联储和FDIC排除在加密货币工作组之外。


原文

Authored by Zoltan Vardai via CoinTelegraph.com,

Some US government agencies continue to deny transparency regarding their role in Operation Chokepoint 2.0, a period during the Biden administration when crypto and tech founders were allegedly denied banking services, according to Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal.

The collapse of crypto-friendly banks in early 2023 sparked the first allegations of Operation Chokepoint 2.0. Critics, including venture capitalist Nic Carter, described it as a government effort to pressure banks into cutting ties with cryptocurrency firms.

Despite recent regulatory shifts, agencies like the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) continue to “resist basic transparency” efforts, Grewal wrote in a March 8 post on X.

“They haven’t gotten the message,” he wrote.

Source: Paul Grewal

Coinbase has requested that the FDIC provide details in court on how it conducted “due diligence” to ensure no documentation related to the event was destroyed. However, the agency “repeatedly refused to do so,” Grewal said.

His comments come a day after the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) eased its stance on how banks can engage with crypto just hours after US President Donald Trump vowed to end the prolonged crackdown restricting crypto firms’ access to banking services.

Trump’s remarks were made during the White House Crypto Summit, where he told industry leaders he was “ending Operation Chokepoint 2.0.”

Source: Elon Musk

At least 30 tech and crypto founders were “secretly debanked” in the US during Operation Chokepoint 2.0, Cointelegraph reported in November 2024.

Grewal claimed the FDIC has also not fully cooperated with Coinbase’s documentation requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA):

“[...] the agency has produced only snippets from a few documents that have little to nothing to do with the specific FOIA policies or practices that History Associates has challenged in its amended complaint. What exactly are they hiding?”

Moreover, Grewal said the FDIC has redacted a total of 53 pages, with many other pages containing “heavy redactions rendering the documents unintelligible.”

Grewal added that his team requested that the FDIC give a “sworn testimony” to the court.

On March 4, Coinbase also submitted a FOIA request to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to find out how many investigations and enforcement actions were brought against crypto firms between April 17, 2021, and Jan. 20, 2025.

Trump previously signed an executive order to end some banking challenges for Web3 companies and create clearer regulations for digital assets, Cointelegraph reported on Jan. 24.

The executive order excludes the US Federal Reserve and FDIC from cryptocurrency working groups, in a move that may put an end to the previous crypto industry debanking efforts, according to Caitlin Long, founder and CEO of Custodia Bank.

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