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Senators Press SEC Chair Over Enforcement Chief’s Abrupt Exit Amid Crypto Case Questions

 |  March 31, 2026

Two senior U.S. lawmakers are demanding answers from Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Paul Atkins following the sudden resignation of the agency’s top enforcement official, raising concerns that political or policy considerations may have influenced decisions involving high-profile cryptocurrency cases, reported Bloomberg.

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    Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., formally requested documents and internal communications in a letter sent Monday, focusing on the March 16 departure of former Enforcement Director Margaret “Meg” Ryan. Ryan stepped down after just over six months in the role, an unusually brief tenure for a position central to the SEC’s regulatory mandate.

    Blumenthal’s inquiry points to reports that senior agency leadership may have intervened to block enforcement actions against certain cryptocurrency firms. “Ms. Ryan’s abrupt departure…raises questions,” he wrote, citing concerns about whether enforcement staff were prevented from pursuing cases tied to major industry figures.

    The SEC declined to comment on the letter.

    Separately, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., the ranking member of the Senate Banking Committee, described Ryan’s resignation as “troubling” and called for greater transparency. Warren is seeking not only details surrounding the departure but also updated enforcement statistics for the past year, which have yet to be publicly released.

    Per Bloomberg, the senators’ concerns come amid a broader shift in the SEC’s posture toward digital asset enforcement. Since President Donald Trump returned to office, the agency has paused or dismissed more than a dozen cases involving cryptocurrency companies, including major actions against exchanges like Coinbase and Binance.

    Blumenthal’s letter specifically requests records related to potential enforcement actions involving prominent crypto figures such as Justin Sun and Changpeng Zhao. Zhao, widely known as “CZ,” co-founded Binance, one of the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchanges.

    Read more: CFTC Unveils New Task Force to Focus on AI, Crypto, Prediction Markets

    The SEC earlier this month ended its case against Sun, who had faced allegations of securities violations and market manipulation. One of Sun’s affiliated entities agreed to pay $10 million to resolve the matter without admitting or denying wrongdoing.

    Blumenthal highlighted Sun’s financial ties to Trump-linked crypto ventures, noting that the entrepreneur had purchased millions of dollars’ worth of a Trump-branded memecoin and invested early in World Liberty Financial, a digital asset initiative associated with the president’s family.

    Requests for White House and Internal Communications

    In addition to case-specific inquiries, Blumenthal is seeking communications between SEC officials and members of the Trump family, as well as records detailing any instances in which Ryan’s enforcement recommendations may have been overridden by senior leadership.

    The request also extends to documents involving Zach Witkoff, chief executive of World Liberty Financial and son of Steve Witkoff, a senior administration official.

    The White House has pushed back on suggestions of improper influence. In a statement, White House counsel David Warrington said the president “performs his constitutional duties in an ethically sound manner,” dismissing allegations of conflicts as unfounded.

    Ryan’s appointment last year was notable given her background outside traditional securities enforcement. A former Marine and judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, she brought a nontraditional profile to the role, which is typically filled by seasoned securities lawyers or longtime SEC officials.

    Her departure, announced via a brief internal email with no explanation, has intensified scrutiny over the agency’s recent enforcement trajectory—particularly as the administration promotes a policy vision of making the United States a global hub for cryptocurrency innovation.

    With congressional oversight intensifying, the SEC now faces mounting pressure to clarify whether its evolving enforcement strategy reflects a deliberate policy shift—or something more contentious behind the scenes.

    Source: Bloomberg