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Crypto Expert Debunks XRP Lawsuit Delay Myths: ’2026 Timeline Is Pure Fiction’

Crypto Expert Debunks XRP Lawsuit Delay Myths: ’2026 Timeline Is Pure Fiction’

Author:
Bitcoinist
Published:
2025-06-23 15:00:51
5
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Ripple's legal saga takes another twist as industry analysts dismiss延期 rumors.

Why the 2026 speculation is dead on arrival—and what it means for XRP holders.

Legal eagles circle as SEC case enters make-or-break phase. No more 'wait-and-see'—the clock's ticking louder than a Bitcoin miner's cooling fans.

Funny how 'regulatory clarity' always seems three years away in crypto—just like those institutional adoption promises.

XRP Lawsuit: Why 2026 Is A Stretch

Morgan’s confidence rests on hard procedural facts. On 13 June Ripple and the SEC filed a joint Rule 60(b)/62.1 motion asking Judge Analisa Torres to dissolve last year’s injunction and redistribute the $125 million civil penalty now sitting in escrow — $50 million WOULD satisfy the SEC; the remaining $75 million would be returned to Ripple.

The filing also proposes that, if Torres signals she is inclined to grant it, both sides will seek a limited remand from the Second Circuit so the district court can enter a revised final judgment and terminate all appeals. Critically, the Second Circuit has already paused those appeals and ordered the SEC to file a simple status report by 15 August 2025. That administrative date — now being mis-read as a litigation deadline, doesn’t mean the final decision will take until 2026.

Judge Torres’ July 2023 summary-judgment split the case, holding that institutional sales of XRP were unregistered securities offerings but programmatic exchange sales were not. After remedies briefing, she entered a $125 million penalty and a permanent injunction in August 2024. Both sides noticed appeals, but in March 2025 the SEC withdrew its challenge to the programmatic-sales ruling and signalling a broader retreat from crypto-first enforcement. The parties then began settlement talks that produced the current joint motion.

The renewed request goes further than the May version Torres rejected for procedural defects: it lays out “exceptional circumstances” — chiefly, the policy shift at the SEC and the parties’ mutual interest in ending the litigation — that courts require before modifying a final judgment under Rule 60(b)(6). If Torres issues the “indicative ruling” the motion seeks, the case would likely return to her docket on limited remand and close swiftly without full appellate briefing.

Morgan concedes that total settlement failure is “not impossible.” If Torres were to deny the joint motion and decline to dissolve the injunction, both sides would revive their cross-appeals. That procedural reset could indeed postpone a conclusive ruling into late 2026 — but only under that narrow, two-step scenario he deems “improbable”.

At press time, XRP traded at $1.99.

XRP price

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