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Ripple v. SEC: Court Adjusts Proposed Calendar

Analisa Torres, a judge for the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, has set a briefing schedule for Ripple and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in her recent order.

In late March, the court asked the parties to agree on the schedule for filing summary judgment motions.

After meeting and conferring, the parties submitted a joint proposed schedule for the court’s approval on April 29.

Read Also: 115.3 Million XRP Sent by Ripple and Large Exchanges to This Destination

Torres has investigated the parties’ letter, ordering that all motions to exclude expert testimony must be fully briefed by the end of August. The scheduling order would not apply to any motions that are meant to block the expert testimony of financial expert Anthony M. Bracco. Such testimony can only be filed “once the issue of remedies is ripe,” the judge says.

The parties must prosecute any motions for summary judgment by September 2021. Ripple and SEC will have a small over a month to file their opponents and motions.

As stated by the calendar modified by the judge, motions for summary judgment must be fully briefed before Nov. 15, a month earlier than the deadline that was originally proposed by the two parties.

Ripple was sued by the SEC in December 2020. The regulatory watchdog accused one of the biggest crypto companies of selling unregistered securities in the form of the XRP token.

Read Also: Ripple vs SEC: Resolution Probably to Come in 2023 As Stated by Ripple’s Stuart Alderoty

As reported by U.Today, CEO Brad Garlinghouse recently said that the lawsuit was going “well.” He also noted that the company was operating as if it had already lost since 95% of its businesses are based outside of the U.S.

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