Two crypto courtroom sagas unfolded in Manhattan this week, delivering plot twists more baffling than a quantum physics soap opera. One defendant vanished like a digital ghost, while another’s legal strategy hit a wall with all the elegance of a runaway Segway.
SEC Abandons Bitclout-Deso Case: “Nope, Not Today,” Says Regulator
In a twist that left lawyers scratching their heads like confused penguins, the SEC decided to fold its civil fraud lawsuit against Deso founder Nader Al-Naji. The agency filed a joint stipulation of dismissal with prejudice on March 12, which is legal code for “we tried, but this case is now as dead as a discothèques in 2020.”
For the uninitiated: this case is now buried so deep under procedural rubble that the SEC couldn’t refile it even if they wanted to. Imagine trying to un-bake a cake, but the recipe’s been fed into a shredder. Good luck.
The lawsuit, launched in July 2024, accused Al-Naji of running a “multi-million-dollar crypto asset scheme” that made Bitclout (later Deso) sound like a pyramid scheme designed by a particularly ambitious squirrel. The SEC alleged he raised $257 million selling BTCLT tokens, promising investors the funds would build a decentralized utopia, not finance his Beverly Hills rent or family vacations.
Al-Naji, who once masqueraded as “Diamondhands” (a pseudonym so subtle it could’ve fooled a parrot), insisted his project was “legitimate” and “decentralized,” which is blockchain code for “nobody’s in charge, but please keep sending money.”
The SEC’s sudden retreat? A “reassessment of the evidentiary record,” they claimed. Translation: “We stared into the abyss of this case, and the abyss blinked first.” Both sides agreed to cover their own legal fees, which is corporate speak for “nobody won, but everyone’s paying.”
This marks the second legal Hail Mary for the case. Earlier, a parallel wire-fraud case collapsed like a wet paper bag when a New York magistrate dismissed it without prejudice in 2025. Spoiler: that’s not a compliment.
Al-Naji, a former Google engineer turned crypto-entrepreneur, launched Deso in 2021 after shuttering his earlier stablecoin venture Basis. The project attracted big-name investors like Andreessen Horowitz and the Winklevoss twins, proving that even Silicon Valley’s elite occasionally forget to read the fine print.
Judge Nukes EminiFX RICO Claims: “Not in My Courtroom, You Don’t”
Meanwhile, in a courtroom down the hall, U.S. District Judge Ronnie Abrams delivered a masterclass in judicial facepalming. She dismissed racketeering claims in the EminiFX Ponzi scheme lawsuit, dashing investors’ hopes of dragging church leaders into the mess. The scheme, run by ex-pastor Eddy Alexandre, promised “5% weekly returns” – a pitch so suspicious it makes lottery tickets look like prudent investments.
Alexandre, currently serving a nine-year prison sentence, allegedly siphoned $248 million from 2021-2022 into his personal accounts, buying a $155,000 BMW and presumably a lifetime supply of irony. Plaintiffs tried to sue church entities under RICO, arguing the clergy’s “authority” helped rope in parishioners. Judge Abrams responded with the legal equivalent of a raised eyebrow: “Nice try, but Congress explicitly banned using securities fraud to sue under RICO. Go home. Read a law book. Maybe try yoga.”
Without RICO’s big guns, the court lacked jurisdiction, so the case was dismissed. Plaintiffs have 30 days to revise their complaint, which is like being handed a second chance to assemble IKEA furniture without the instructions.
FAQ 🔎
- Why did the SEC drop the Bitclout-Deso case?
The agency stared into the legal abyss, realized the abyss had a restraining order, and walked away whistling. - Is Al-Naji off the hook?
The civil case is dead, but “not guilty” isn’t the same as “morally pure.” Think of it as the judicial version of a traffic cone – it blocks the road but doesn’t prove anything’s wrong. - What happened to the EminiFX RICO claims?
Judge Abrams smacked them down harder than a vegan at a steak cookout. Turns out, RICO doesn’t cover securities fraud – Congress saw that one coming from space. - Is the EminiFX case over?
Only if plaintiffs give up. Otherwise, expect a revised complaint thicker than a dictionary and twice as confusing.
In conclusion, 2026’s crypto litigation scene resembles a game of legal Jenga: everyone’s pulling at statutes, someone’s always yelling “that’s not how this works!”, and the whole tower’s one misstep away from collapse. But hey, at least the judges are keeping score – and occasionally snorting coffee at the absurdity.
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2026-03-15 01:57