Terraform Labs Ordered To Comply With The U.S. SEC Subpoenas

A judge in the Southern District of New York has ordered Terraform Labs to comply with investigative subpoenas from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Last September the SEC served Terraform Chief Executive Do Kwon with a subpoena during a crypto conference in New York City. The subpoena was part of an investigation into whether Terraform Labs had violated US securities laws with its Mirror Protocol, a platform which creates crypto assets for users to buy and sell popular stocks like Microsoft or Tesla.
These stocks are normally sold through the NYSE, but with Mirror Protocol, users can buy them on the blockchain. According to the SEC that it had reason to believe Kwon and Terraform Labs “participated in the creation, promotion and offer to sell assets and MIR tokens to U.S. investors.” The SEC said the subpoena was part of a “fact finding investigation.”
Kwon and Terraform fought back on these requests. Yesterday, the Court heard oral arguments on the case in a telephone conference. In the proceedings, the judge ordered Terraform and Kwon to comply with the SEC’s subpoenas and requests for testimony in its Mirror Protocol investigation.
According to the case filing:
“For the reasons stated on the record at the February 17, 2022 conference, the SEC’s application is GRANTED, and Terraform and Kwon are hereby ordered to comply with the above-referenced subpoenas.
This order is STAYED for 14 days to permit further briefing regarding a potential stay pending any appeal of this order.”
As a response to SEC’s initial subpoena, Kwon had filed a separate civil lawsuit claiming that his rights to due process were violated by the SEC. In that case, the two have just submitted arguments over a motion to dismiss from the SEC.










