The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a joint stipulation to dismiss its civil fraud case against Nader Al-Naji, founder of BitClout and DeSo, withThe U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a joint stipulation to dismiss its civil fraud case against Nader Al-Naji, founder of BitClout and DeSo, with

SEC Has Permanently Dropped Its Fraud Case Against the BitClout Founder

2026/03/15 17:13
3 min read
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has filed a joint stipulation to dismiss its civil fraud case against Nader Al-Naji, founder of BitClout and DeSo, with prejudice, permanently barring the agency from refiling the same claims.

What the Dismissal Actually Means

A dismissal with prejudice is not a procedural pause. It is a permanent closure. The SEC cannot refile these specific charges against Al-Naji, his wife, his mother, or the controlled entities named as relief defendants including the DeSo Foundation. The case is closed with no legal path to revival under the same claims.

The SEC cited a reassessment of the evidentiary record and the specific facts and circumstances of the case as its reasoning. That language is deliberately non-committal. It does not constitute an acknowledgment that the original allegations were unfounded. It signals that the agency no longer believes it has the evidentiary foundation to pursue the case successfully under its current enforcement priorities.

What the Original Case Alleged

The SEC filed the complaint in July 2024, making three core allegations. First, that Al-Naji raised over $257 million through unregistered token sales of BTCLT. Second, that he misled investors by operating under the pseudonym Diamondhands to create the impression of a leaderless, decentralised project while maintaining control. Third, that he diverted approximately $7 million in investor funds for personal expenses including rent on a Beverly Hills mansion.

Those are serious allegations. The dismissal does not mean they were false. It means the SEC has chosen not to pursue them, for reasons the agency has not fully disclosed beyond the evidentiary reassessment framing.

The Policy Shift Behind the Decision

The SEC’s litigation release explicitly connected the dismissal to the formation of a Crypto Task Force in January 2025, following the change in administration. That task force was established with a mandate to shift the agency’s approach from enforcement-led regulation toward clearer rulemaking. The Al-Naji dismissal is one in a series of cases the SEC has dropped or paused under that policy shift, which has included withdrawals from cases against Coinbase, Ripple, and other crypto firms.

The pattern is consistent. The new SEC posture is to pull back from active litigation against crypto companies and founders while the regulatory framework is being rebuilt through rulemaking rather than enforcement. Whether that represents a genuine recalibration of regulatory approach or a temporary reprieve that could reverse under a future administration is an open question.

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The DOJ Parallel

The civil dismissal follows the Department of Justice dropping a parallel criminal wire fraud case against Al-Naji in March 2025, approximately one year ago. The criminal case being dropped first, followed by the civil dismissal now, completes the full legal unwinding of both tracks of government action against Al-Naji.

He faced both criminal and civil exposure simultaneously for the same underlying conduct. Both cases have now been closed. That outcome, given the specificity of the original allegations including the $7 million personal diversion claim, reflects the degree to which the current regulatory environment has shifted away from aggressive crypto enforcement.

The post SEC Has Permanently Dropped Its Fraud Case Against the BitClout Founder appeared first on ETHNews.

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