The U.S. SEC on Thursday dismissed enforcement actions against three major crypto firms, filing joint stipulations to drop the cases with prejudice, making the decisions final and not subject to refile.
Kraken, ConsenSys, and Cumberland DRW LLC all saw their respective lawsuits terminated simultaneously, marking the latest reversal in the agency's regulatory approach toward digital assets.
The regulator has also officially closed its case against the exchange Crypto.com.
Disclaimer: ConsenSys is one of 22 investors in an editorially independent Decrypt.
The dismissals form part of a broader pivot in U.S. crypto regulation under the Trump administration, following similar ends to cases against Coinbase, Robinhood, Uniswap Labs, and OpenSea.

SEC Drops Investigation into Web3 Gaming Firm Immutable
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has officially closed its investigation into Ethereum-based gaming platform Immutable with no enforcement action, the company announced Tuesday. The decision ends a five-month tussle that began when the regulator issued Immutable a Wells Notice in October 2024, which probed into potential enforcement actions over alleged securities law violations related to the company's IMX token. With no further legal consequences against Immutable, the IMX Eco...
In a statement following the dismissal of civil enforcement action against Coinbase, acting SEC Chairman Mark T. Uyeda said these decisions were part of the agency's "ongoing efforts" to "rectify its approach” and develop crypto policy in a “more transparent manner."
Notably, the SEC emphasized that these dismissals do not "necessarily reflect the Commission's position on any other case."
The decision ends a "wasteful, politically motivated campaign," Kraken said in a statement when the resolution for their case with the regulator arrived.
Kraken further characterized the SEC's move as something that lifted "uncertainty" over what could have "stifled innovation and investment."
The exchange provider later revealed its prospects of going public, potentially coming in as the second crypto firm to do so after Coinbase.

SEC Schedules Four New Roundtables for Crypto Task Force
The SEC's Crypto Task Force announced Tuesday it will host four more roundtables on crypto and digital asset regulation. The roundtables would run from April to June, building on the agency's efforts to create clearer rules for the industry. Crypto roundtables are a way for the SEC to "hear a lively discussion among experts" in order to understand current regulatory issues and what the Commission can do to “solve them," Commissioner Hester Peirce, who leads the task force, said in a statement....
The resolution ends a tumultuous period for the industry. Each of the three companies had faced serious allegations under the prior Gensler regime.
Kraken was charged in November 2023 with operating an unregistered securities exchange, broker, dealer, and clearing agency.
ConsenSys faced accusations in June 2024 of unlawfully offering securities through its MetaMask Staking service.
Cumberland DRW, a Chicago-based trading firm, was sued in October 2024 for allegedly acting as an unregistered dealer handling over $2 billion in crypto assets.
Under acting Chairman Uyeda, the SEC has established a task force and actively engaged with the crypto industry, signaling a departure from the previous administration's enforcement-focused approach.
Edited by Sebastian Sinclair