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New York AG Secures $5 Million Crypto Lending Settlement

April 30, 2026
Estimated Read Time: 2 mins

On April 29, New York AG Letitia James announced an Assurance of Discontinuance with a cryptocurrency platform resolving allegations that the platform promoted a third-party crypto lending product in violation of the Martin Act and New York Executive Law § 63(12). The AG alleged that the platform advertised the lending product to users as a way to earn interest on digital assets, while failing to register and omitting material information about the product's risks.

Specifically, the Assurance alleges that the platform:

  • Offered unregistered securities. The lending agreements were alleged to be investment contracts, and the platform allegedly facilitated those transactions without required registration.
  • Made misleading marketing statements. The platform allegedly promoted high returns and “comprehensive insurance” without adequately disclosing that the insurance did not cover investment losses.
  • Omitted key risk information. The platform allegedly failed to disclose that investor assets were deployed into higher-risk lending arrangements.

The Assurance requires the platform to pay $5 million in monetary relief, distribute funds to eligible investors, and maintain a risk-based due diligence process for third-party partners.

Putting It Into Practice: This settlement underscores state regulators’ continued focus on crypto yield products, especially where platforms promote third-party offerings to their own customers. Market participants should review registration obligations, marketing disclosures, and partner diligence procedures before offering or advertising digital asset yield products.

Tags: Cryptocurrency, Lending, State Issues, Enforcement

Disclaimer: This alert is provided for information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice and is not intended to form an attorney client relationship. Please contact your Sheppard attorney contact for additional information.

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