Two more top executives are leaving Binance.US, one day after the departure of CEO Brian Shroder and the layoff of a third of its staff, the Wall Street Journal reported. Binance.US is the United States offshoot of the international cryptocurrency exchange. Head of legal Krishna Juvvadi and chief risk officer Sidney Majalya were said to be leaving.
Juvvadi was hired in May 2022, coming from Uber, where he was global head of compliance. Majalya joined the company in December 2021 after being Intel chief compliance officer. Before Intel, he too had worked for Uber.
Juvvadi, the WSJ noted, “was one of the company’s contacts for communicating with the SEC [United States Securities and Exchange commission].” Binance.US is facing legal action from the SEC.
News:https://t.co/vjKMrUnANQ on-boards its first-ever Chief Risk Officer
Crypto exchange Binance US has hired its first-ever Chief risk officer Sidney Majalya from Intel Corp to stay in compliance…https://t.co/hwdvPyS1b8#binance #cryptonews #dailynews #cryptoexchange pic.twitter.com/z1YZluAvii
— CoinsCapture (@CoinsCapture) December 18, 2021
The agency request to file sealed documents in the case in the in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Aug. 28, which a former SEC official interpreted as possibly indicating a criminal probe by the Department of Justice. Bloomberg reported in May that a Justice Department probe of Binance was underway.
The SEC sued Binance.US, Binance and CEO Changpeng Zhao in June, claiming they engaged in unregistered securities operations and other improprieties. That led to problems with Binance.US’ banking partners and pauses in U.S. dollar deposits and withdrawals that were only resolved in August, when it partnered with crypto payments firm MoonPay.
Related: Binance’s Richard Teng denies FTX comparisons: ‘We welcome the scrutiny’
Binance.US has objected to SEC legal tactics, requesting a protective order against the agency in August and calling SEC requests in a compel and reply motion “unreasonable” and “unduly burdensome” Sept. 12.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) sued Binance in March, alleging violated trading and derivatives rules. Binance has also seen the departures of executives this year, as well as layoffs.
Cointelegraph contacted Binance.US but did not receive a response in time for publication.
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