As ongoing disclosures related to Jeffrey Epstein continue to surface, discussions surrounding Ripple and the U.S. securities regulatory controversy have reignited. XRP community commentator “Stellar Rippler” pointed out that Ripple has every reason to sue parties believed to have played a role in early regulatory setbacks, in order to recover economic losses caused by policy and public opinion interference.
According to disclosed information, on May 7, 2018, Epstein sent an email marked “Do not share or cite” to former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Lawrence Summers, asking about Gary Gensler and mentioning that Gensler hoped to discuss digital currencies. Two years later, Gensler became Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Meanwhile, Austin Hill, co-founder of Blockstream, publicly regarded Ripple and Stellar as “threats,” and was accused of discouraging Epstein and Joi Ito, former director of the MIT Media Lab, from investing in related projects. Some observers speculate that these early contacts may have subtly influenced subsequent enforcement actions against Ripple.
Stellar Rippler believes that years of legal disputes have hindered Ripple’s expansion in the U.S. market, frozen collaborations, limited XRP liquidity, and put enormous pressure on both enterprises and retail investors. He pointed out that retail investors have become the biggest victims, not only facing price volatility risks but also being forced to confront long-term legal uncertainties. He views this situation as the result of “regulatory overreach combined with political timing,” and calls for companies to pursue legal action against potential responsible parties.
However, some analysts warn that the initial lawsuit against Ripple was filed by former regulator Jay Clayton, not Gensler, who only took over after the case was initiated. Nevertheless, courts have criticized regulatory agencies for procedural and legal shortcomings, further amplifying the controversy.
Currently, discussions about whether to trace the so-called “source of policy intervention” are heating up again. Some industry insiders believe that if Ripple chooses to act, it could open up new legal battlegrounds for XRP investors; but others point out that, given Ripple’s ongoing cooperation with the U.S. government in multiple areas, the likelihood of actually filing a lawsuit remains uncertain.
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