Judge Martin Glenn shot down efforts to have a special shareholders class declared in the Celsius Network bankruptcy case in a court document filed on Aug. 25. The judge also declined to settle whether or not the CEL token was a security.
In a motion filed on July 25 and heard before the United States Bankruptcy Court Southern District New York on Aug. 14, investor Otis Davis asked the court to create a legal class for investors to be considered separate from Celsius Network employees and customers.
Davis also requested that the court sanction the legal team representing the Unsecured Creditors Committee (UCC) over alleged failure to disclose required information.
The filing further asked the court to declare CEL “not a security” in light of the recent findings in the SEC vs Ripple where, according to Davis, Judge Analisa Torres determined that XRP was not a security.
Related: Breaking: Judge rules XRP is not a security in SEC's case against Ripple
It’s worth mentioning that, in the XRP case, Judge Torres ruled that Ripple was not a security in regards to programmatic sales on digital asset exchanges. In the same ruling, however, Judge Torres also said that Ripple was a security when sold to institutional investors.
In the Celsius bankruptcy case, Judge Glenn’s response was relatively swift, denying all three motions set forth just eleven days after motion was argued in an Aug. 14 hearing.
Judge Glenn shot down all of the motion’s requests and further added:
As Cointelegraph reported, the Celsius Network bankruptcy occurred on July 14, 2022. Just a year later, the company’s former CEO, Alex Mashinsky, was arrested and charged with fraud.
In the time since, Celsius Network has agreed upon numerous settlements meant to
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