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EXPOSED: Ripple’s Covert Connections to U.S. Intelligence Agencies Uncovered

EXPOSED: Ripple’s Covert Connections to U.S. Intelligence Agencies Uncovered

Author:
Coingape
Published:
2025-07-07 13:39:09
6
2

Behind Ripple's polished fintech façade lies a web of shadowy ties—now unraveling.

The XRP-Intel Nexus: New evidence suggests Ripple's corridors may have been quietly walked by three-letter agencies. Sources whisper about backchannel access, encrypted meetings, and a blockchain that knows more than it lets on.

Silicon Valley’s worst-kept secret? While crypto purists rage about decentralization, insiders claim Ripple’s DC liaisons gave it regulatory armor—explaining how it dodged SEC bullets that sank rivals. (Cue Wall Street’s collective eye-roll.)

The fallout: If proven, these links could torch Ripple’s ‘rebel’ image overnight—turning the crypto darling into just another government-adjacent payments rail. But hey, at least the compliance paperwork’s probably impeccable.

How High Will XRP Price Go After Lawsuit?

Ripple has always been surrounded by secrets and strong opinions, but a new claim by Edward Farina, founder of Alpha Lions Academy. He says its deep roots LINK back to old trademarks and connections to U.S. intelligence groups. A few names and dates are raising eyebrows, and the missing piece could be Ryan Fugger, Ripple’s quiet early founder.

The Name Ripple: More Than a Song?

At the center of this claim is Ryan Fugger, the man who first created Ripple’s early idea. Fugger once said the name “Ripple” came from a song by the Grateful Dead. But Farina says there’s more to it. 

He points out that a company called Ripple Communications was set up way back in 1991, years before anyone knew about crypto.

In 2005, the same year the U.S. intelligence network INSA was reorganized, three interesting domains appeared under the same IP: Ripplecom, RipplePay, and OpenCoin. OpenCoin later became Ripple Labs, which we know today.

At the same time, Karen Nussle worked for Ripple Communications. Oddly enough, she was also listed as a key contact at INSA, a U.S. Intelligence and National Security Alliance that connects private contractors with U.S. spy agencies.

Who Are These People?

Farina adds more fuel to the fire by pointing at names linked to both Ripple and U.S. intelligence. Suzanne Wilson Heckenberg pops up too. She held top roles at INSA but worked at Ripple Communications between 2010 and 2012. 

Just as she left, Jed McCaleb bought the ripple.com domain and the old trademark. After that, Ripple Communications vanished, but Ripple Labs took its place.

So What’s the Truth?

All eyes turn back to Fugger, the original mind behind RipplePay. He faded from the public eye as Ripple grew into a billion-dollar company. Why he stepped back, and why Ripple still holds trademarks from a 1991 telecom firm, keeps this theory alive.

Maybe Ripple is just a payment company. Or maybe, as some think, it’s something more hidden in plain sight.

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