YouTuber says SEC will recommend dropping lawsuit over 2018 token ICO
12 March 2025 - 8:38AM
Cointelegraph


Update (March 11 at
9:59 pm UTC): This article has been updated to include a response
from the SEC.
Ian Balina, the CEO of Token Metrics and a YouTuber with more
than 100,000 subscribers, said the US Securities and Exchange
Commission will stop pursuing him in court over allegations he
violated securities laws by promoting Sparkster (SPRK) tokens in
2018.
Speaking to Cointelegraph on March 11, Balina said the SEC had
informed him it planned to recommend the court dismiss a case filed
in 2022 alleging “unregistered offering and promotion in 2018 of
crypto asset securities called SPRK Tokens.”
According to the crypto YouTuber, the SEC’s actions were based
on the change in the administration’s priorities — referring to US
President Donald Trump appointing acting SEC Chair Mark Uyeda after
the departure of Gary Gensler in January.
“Obviously, the new administration is pro-crypto,” said Balina,
claiming that the “time has ended” for crypto regulation through
enforcement.
Balina speaking about Sparkster on YouTube in 2018.
Source: Ian
Balina
The SEC complaint against Balina, filed in September 2022,
alleged the YouTuber agreed to receive a 30% bonus from Sparkster
on the $5 million worth of tokens he purchased in the initial coin
offering (ICO) — but did not disclose this information to his
social media followers. In one of the last significant court
rulings, a judge said in May
2024 that “SPRK tokens qualify as securities” under the SEC’s
purview.
At the time of the 2024 decision, Balina’s legal team said it
planned to appeal. The judge initially set a January 2025 jury
trial date but approved a July 2024 motion for a continuance and
agreed to schedule the proceedings at a later date. At the time of
publication, no filing appeared on the docket in the US District
Court for the Western District of Texas requesting to dismiss the
case. In response to an inquiry from Cointelegraph, the SEC
declined to comment on the case.
“It definitely was not cheap, cost a lot of money in terms of
legal fees, which definitely sucks,” said Balina. “Makes me wish
the SEC hadn’t put priority on all this.”
About-face from SEC on crypto enforcement after Gensler’s
departure
If confirmed by the SEC, petitioning to drop Balina’s case would
be the commission’s latest action favoring crypto companies facing
similar lawsuits. Since Trump took office on Jan. 20, the regulator
announced it would stop pursuing investigations into Robinhood
Crypto, Gemini, Uniswap and OpenSea and dropped cases
against Coinbase, Consensys, Kraken and others.
The commission still has an open case against Ripple Labs,
facing an appeal and cross-appeal following a $125
judgment in August 2024.
Related:
SEC looking to abandon effort requiring crypto firms to
register as exchanges
Many critics have suggested that the crypto industry
purchased
influence with the Trump administration by supporting the
Republican candidate in the 2024 election or contributing to his
inauguration fund after his November victory.
The US president hosted a crypto summit at the White House on
March 7, attended by many industry leaders who directly or
indirectly supported “pro-crypto” candidates in the last election
cycle, including representatives of Robinhood, Gemini, Coinbase and
Kraken.
Magazine: SEC’s
U-turn on crypto leaves key questions
unanswered
...
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dropping lawsuit over 2018 token ICO
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