A Dramatic About-Face on Crypto Enforcement
The Securities and Exchange Commission has made a striking U-turn on cryptocurrency enforcement since Donald Trump returned to office in January. According to a New York Times report published Sunday, the agency inherited 23 active crypto enforcement matters and has since pulled back on 14 of them through dismissals, freezes, or settlements.
The publication characterized this shift as highly unusual for a regulator that historically digs in its heels once litigation begins. Former SEC trial counsel Christopher E. Martin, who led one of the abandoned cases, didn't mince words. He called the retreat "a complete surrender" and argued that investors were "thrown to the wolves."
Internal Turmoil During the Transition
Behind the scenes, the presidential transition appears to have created significant friction within the agency. The Times reported that enforcement chief Sanjay Wadhwa pushed staff to continue pursuing crypto cases, but several senior officials allegedly checked out.
According to sources cited in the report, one senior crypto leader took an unannounced multiweek absence, while another refused to attach her name to a post-election crypto filing. Other officials reportedly stopped working on crypto cases entirely.
The Dog That Didn't Bark
Here's where the story gets interesting. Despite its critical framing, the Times acknowledged it found no evidence that Trump, the White House, or crypto firms pressured the SEC to ease enforcement. The article also stated there was no indication that firms attempted to influence outcomes through donations or business ties.
That admission has become the lightning rod for industry criticism of the entire narrative.
Coinbase Fires Back
Coinbase Inc. (COIN) Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal took aim at the Times story, arguing it implied impropriety while simultaneously conceding none existed. Grewal said the article's own reporting undercut its framing, calling the narrative "twisted" given the complete absence of political interference or favoritism.
Was This Really Surprising?
Several analysts contend the enforcement rollback was entirely predictable and reflects a philosophical shift at the SEC rather than political meddling. Galaxy Digital research head Alex Thorn pointed out that the previous administration's crypto crackdown relied on novel and contested interpretations of securities law that faced bipartisan criticism and repeated defeats in court.
When Republican commissioners Hester Peirce and Mark Uyeda moved into a controlling majority after former Chair Gary Gensler stepped down, Thorn argued a reversal was practically inevitable.
"It's not irregular at all for the SEC to drop these cases," Thorn wrote. "If you overturn the premises, the cases fall away."
The Bigger Picture
This dispute reveals a growing chasm between how traditional media frames regulatory change and how the crypto industry interprets it. Where critics see abandonment of investor protection, supporters see a necessary correction away from regulation by enforcement toward clearer rulemaking.
For markets, the timing matters. Bitcoin (BTC) and other major digital assets increasingly trade on expectations of regulatory clarity rather than the outcome of individual court battles. Whether the SEC's pivot is viewed as abdication or recalibration will shape both the agency's future enforcement credibility and the market's long-term confidence in U.S. crypto oversight.




