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A New York court today denied a request from crypto exchange Bitfinex to scupper an investigation by the state’s Attorney General, who alleges that Bitfinex used its sister company, the stablecoin giant Tether, to hide a near-$1 billion hole in its finances.
Despite Bitfinex’s protestations, the court said that it does have jurisdiction, as does the NYAG.
Stuart Hoegner, Bitfinex's General Counsel, said in a statement: "We have read the decision issued today by the Appellate Division of the New York Supreme Court, First Department. As we have at all times in this process, we will respect the court's order. We have no further comment on this matter at this time."
Tether had originally claimed that its US-dollar pegged stablecoin was backed by US dollar reserves—for every USDT token, it had one US dollar in its bank account.
But last April, Attorney General Letitia James’ office argued that USDT was not one-to-one backed by US dollar reserves. Tether later conceded that its reserves were only 74% backed by US dollars.
Why weren’t they 100% backed? The NYAG alleges that, when the dubious “shadow bank” used by the companies, Crypto Capital, was frozen and its directors arrested, Bitfinex issued Tether loans to replace that money. The loans, it alleged, were little more than IOUs.
Bitfinex, argued the NYAG, had used Tether’s cash reserves as its “corporate slush fund,” and that the reserves are “being used to hide Bitfinex’s massive, undisclosed losses and inability to handle customer withdrawals.”
Bitfinex denied these allegations and asked to scrap the investigation. Bitfinex could not be reached for further comments.
But a New York state appeals court today rejected Bitfinex’s motion to dismiss the case for several reasons.
First, the court dismissed Bitfinex’s argument that Tethers aren’t securities, so the court doesn’t have “jurisdiction over them.” The court dismissed this; it does have the authority to rule on Tether, it argued. The court said that Tether constitutes a security under the Martin Act, the act under which the court has jurisdiction.
Second, the court dismissed Bitfinex’s argument that the NYAG’s investigation wasn’t related to New York state. The court disagreed, citing a case concerning Deutsche Bank in which "proof of one transaction in New York is sufficient to invoke jurisdiction, even though the defendant never enters New York.” Several New Yorkers have used Tether, so its argument doesn’t hold up, said the court.
Accordingly, the court denied Bitfinex’s motion to dismiss.
Editor's Note: This article has been updated to include a comment from Stuart Hoegner, General Counsel for Bitfinex.
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