Coinbase says that a 15-day notice-and-comment period for FinCEN’s new crypto rules is not enough.
Coinbase, one of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the United States, is advocating extension for the industry’s feedback deadline to newly proposed crypto rules by the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, or FinCEN.
In a Dec. 21 blog post, Coinbase’s chief legal officer Paul Grewal addressed FinCEN’s newly released rulemaking regarding self-hosted crypto wallets. The blog post represents an open letter to Kenneth Blanco, the director of FinCEN.
In the letter, Grewal considered the new rules by the Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, as an “unfortunate and disappointing departure” from the company’s long-running relationship with the regulator.
Grewal elaborated that the 15-day period granted by FinCEN to the industry to respond to the new rules is not enough, especially given that it is spanning Christmas holidays and comes amid the COVID-19 pandemic:
“FinCEN asked the public to provide comments in just 15 days, spanning Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve, and New Year’s Day, in the middle of a global pandemic — leaving just a handful of actual working days for comments.”
As such, Coinbase’s legal executive asked FinCEN to “reconsider its haste” and provide a typical 60-day period notice-and-comment for the proposed rulemaking. Grewal noted that 60-day comment periods to regulations represent an ordinary practice by FinCEN in terms of the traditional financial industry. “For example, FinCEN’s Customer Due Diligence Requirements for Financial Institutions provided the traditional 60 days for notice and comment,” Grewal noted.
The exec went on to say that an extended notice-and-comment period will provide the industry with a “true opportunity to engage in the review and comment process with respect to the proposed rule as the law requires.” Grewal wrote:
“There is no emergency here […] There is also no justification for treating the cryptocurrency industry so differently from our counterparts in traditional finance. […] The same rationale applies even more so in the midst of a global pandemic.”
Previously, major industry figures like Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire criticized the new rules, appealing for regulators to collaborate with the industry in adopting crypto regulations. Several members of Congress including representatives Warren Davidson and Tom Emmer also opposed the rumored ban on self-hosted crypto wallets on Dec. 9.
Source: , CoinTelegraph

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