SEC Seeks Court Order to Freeze Binance.US Assets

Wednesday, 07/06/2023 | 05:11 GMT by Arnab Shome
  • The SEC also sought a show cause notice from Binance.US.
  • The exchange assured that all users' funds are "safe and secure."
Binance

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC ) filed a motion yesterday (Tuesday) to obtain a temporary restraining order to freeze the assets tied to BAM Management US Holdings and BAM Trading Services, the holding and operating firms for Binance.US.

SEC's Next Move against Binance

In the latest court filing at the D.C. District Court, the US regulator requested the asset freeze "on an expedited basis."

"The SEC respectfully submits that this relief is necessary on an expedited basis to ensure the safety of customer assets and prevent the dissipation of available assets for any judgment, given the Defendants' years of violative conduct, disregard of the laws of the United States, evasion of regulatory oversight, and open questions about various financial transfers and the custody and control of Customer Assets – including by Defendants who claim they are not subject to the Court's jurisdiction – as described in the Complaint, Memorandum of Law, and supporting materials," the court filing stated.

The motion came a day after the US securities watchdog filed a lawsuit against Binance, its two US affiliates , and Changpeng Zhao, the global unit's CEO, with 13 civil charges. They are blamed for operating illegally in the US, commingling customer funds, wash trading, and much more.

Show Case Demand

In a separate court filing yesterday (Tuesday), the SEC sought show cause from Binance and other defendants on "why a preliminary injunction should not be granted." In addition, it sought to show cause on other things, including "an order directing defendants to repatriate assets held for the benefit of BAM customers," and "an order prohibiting the destruction of records by the defendants."

If the court grants the order, Binance.US will have five days to ensure only it has access to customer funds and transfer them to separate wallets in 30 days. In the initial lawsuit on Monday, the SEC alleged that BAM Trading had allowed Sigma Chain and Merit Peak, two companies tied to Zhao, to access "billions of U.S. dollars" of customer funds.

Funds Are Safe

Following the latest motion, Binance.US, in a tweet, assured that "user assets remain safe and secure" and the platform is fully operational with functional deposits and withdrawals.

"The filing of the preliminary injunction is unwarranted and based more on the SEC Staff obtaining an advantage in litigation versus genuine concern about the safety of customer assets," the tweet added. "Until recently – despite years of engagement – the SEC Staff has not expressed a concern about the safety of customer assets."

Meanwhile, the lawsuit triggered a massive outflow of funds from Binance and its US affiliate, indicating growing customer distrust of these platforms.

UK Bank taps Integral; StoneX's prime brokerage; read today's news nuggets.

The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC ) filed a motion yesterday (Tuesday) to obtain a temporary restraining order to freeze the assets tied to BAM Management US Holdings and BAM Trading Services, the holding and operating firms for Binance.US.

SEC's Next Move against Binance

In the latest court filing at the D.C. District Court, the US regulator requested the asset freeze "on an expedited basis."

"The SEC respectfully submits that this relief is necessary on an expedited basis to ensure the safety of customer assets and prevent the dissipation of available assets for any judgment, given the Defendants' years of violative conduct, disregard of the laws of the United States, evasion of regulatory oversight, and open questions about various financial transfers and the custody and control of Customer Assets – including by Defendants who claim they are not subject to the Court's jurisdiction – as described in the Complaint, Memorandum of Law, and supporting materials," the court filing stated.

The motion came a day after the US securities watchdog filed a lawsuit against Binance, its two US affiliates , and Changpeng Zhao, the global unit's CEO, with 13 civil charges. They are blamed for operating illegally in the US, commingling customer funds, wash trading, and much more.

Show Case Demand

In a separate court filing yesterday (Tuesday), the SEC sought show cause from Binance and other defendants on "why a preliminary injunction should not be granted." In addition, it sought to show cause on other things, including "an order directing defendants to repatriate assets held for the benefit of BAM customers," and "an order prohibiting the destruction of records by the defendants."

If the court grants the order, Binance.US will have five days to ensure only it has access to customer funds and transfer them to separate wallets in 30 days. In the initial lawsuit on Monday, the SEC alleged that BAM Trading had allowed Sigma Chain and Merit Peak, two companies tied to Zhao, to access "billions of U.S. dollars" of customer funds.

Funds Are Safe

Following the latest motion, Binance.US, in a tweet, assured that "user assets remain safe and secure" and the platform is fully operational with functional deposits and withdrawals.

"The filing of the preliminary injunction is unwarranted and based more on the SEC Staff obtaining an advantage in litigation versus genuine concern about the safety of customer assets," the tweet added. "Until recently – despite years of engagement – the SEC Staff has not expressed a concern about the safety of customer assets."

Meanwhile, the lawsuit triggered a massive outflow of funds from Binance and its US affiliate, indicating growing customer distrust of these platforms.

UK Bank taps Integral; StoneX's prime brokerage; read today's news nuggets.

About the Author: Arnab Shome
Arnab Shome
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Arnab is an electronics engineer-turned-financial editor. He entered the industry covering the cryptocurrency market for Finance Magnates and later expanded his reach to forex as well. He is passionate about the changing regulatory landscape on financial markets and keenly follows the disruptions in the industry with new-age technologies.

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