Thousands petition for congressional investigation into alleged ties between Gensler and SBF



Ripple defense attorney John Deaton's CryptoLaw website has a petition app, and readers are urging Congress to verify a suspicious assembly and various supposedly suspicious hyperlinks.

Thousands petition for congressional research of alleged Gensler–SBF hyperlinks
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Nearly four,000 people have used a CryptoLaw petition app to demand that Congress examine the “movements inside the FTX fraud” of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler, the company in a tweet on the morning of November 14.

The CryptoLaw website is run by legal professional John Deaton, who represents Ripple against the SEC and often contributes to public discourse on the case. The petition reads, composing:

“Evidence has emerged that proves that Gensler met […] [FTX CEO] Sam Bankman-Fried, before FTX’s $14 billion collapse. was set to run with Bankman-Fried to offer FTX a free regulatory jump as a big fraud unfolded right under the nose of the SEC […] It's time for a full Congressional investigation into Gensler's role in one of the greatest currency frauds in American history."

Gensler's alleged ties to failed FTX and Bankman-Fried, also known as "SBF," began to generate interest almost as soon as the disgraced alternative's troubles became public knowledge. , who has a lengthy doc as a crypto proponent, tweeted Nov. 10 that "critics at my workplace allege he [Gensler] is helping SBF and FTX paints over legal loopholes to achieve regulatory monopoly ". /p>

Memo on Samuel Bankman Fried's 3/23/22 meeting with SEC Chairman Gensler's team of workers. Remember these names.

— FoiaFan (@15poundstogo)

Emmer is no longer complex about the offer or the nature of the criticisms he referred to, but media reports a forty-five-minute Zoom town hall on March 23 among senior recommend Amanda Fischer and adviser Principal Corey Frayer of the SEC and representatives of the inventory exchange IEX and FTX, as well as SBF itself. FTX later.