Kik Continues Legal Battle With SEC, Requests Trial Date Definition

Published at: Jan. 10, 2020

Kik Interactive Inc. requested the formal definition of a trial date for its lawsuit with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as revealed by a Jan. 9 court document. The company was charged by the SEC in June 2019 for conducting an unregistered security issuance with its $100 million initial coin offering (ICO).

Kik Interactive is the Canadian developer of the Kik messenger app. It launched a successful ICO in 2017, releasing the Kin token. Though it was presented as a utility token for accessing some features of the Kik messenger, the SEC placed the company under scrutiny since early 2019.

The regulatory pressure caused Kik to significantly downsize its operations in September 2019 to focus on the legal battle. CEO Ted Livingstone pledged to fight the SEC until it “didn’t have a dollar left,” though this became unnecessary following a buyout by MediaLab.

Pushing for trial

Kik remains defiant in the face of overwhelming odds, arguing that the commission does not have strong evidence to support their claims. Livingstone had expressed his desire to go to trial as soon as possible, setting May 2020 as a possible target.

However, new documents show that this may be an unattainable goal. In response to a Nov. 26 court order, the two parties agreed on a roadmap in preparation for the trial which is set to be completed in June 2020. 

Additionally, the documents reveal that Kik is objecting to a deposition sought by the SEC, which may further delay plans:

“The parties plan to present a joint letter brief to the Court on the Rule 30(b)(6) issue within a week, and [...] the parties will attempt to schedule this deposition, along with the other two depositions, by the above-proposed fact discovery deadline of January 28, 2020. If the parties are unable to meet this deadline, they will request further relief from the Court regarding the case schedule as appropriate.”

Despite this, Kik requested the court to set a specific trial date. The SEC holds a neutral position on the matter, meaning that the decision is entirely up to the court itself. 

This may occur at the status conference scheduled for Jan. 14, a pre-trial hearing where judges revise the preparatory activities and can set up a tentative trial date.

Tags
Sec
Law
USA
Ico
Kik
Related Posts
SEC sees $5M victory in case against Kik
On Wednesday, the United States Securities and Exchange Commission announced the end of its lawsuit against Kik Interactive. The Canadian messenger app fell afoul of the U.S. regulator for failing to treat its sale of KIN tokens as a securities offering. A district judge confirmed the SEC’s view at the end of September, but only today did the court see the final judgment. As a result of today’s judgment, Kik will need to pay the SEC $5 million in penalties and keep the commission posted as to any capital raises for the next three years. Given that Kik was a …
Regulation / Oct. 21, 2020
Blockchain Association Weighs in on SEC Case Against Kik’s ICO
The United States-based Blockchain Association has filed an amicus curiae brief in support of Canadian messenger Kik amid the firm’s legal battle with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The association addressed the April 17 brief to the court which is considering the case, asking it to deny the SEC’s motion for summary judgment and decide the case narrowly to avoid casting doubt on cryptocurrency projects that have yet to appear before the court. In March, the SEC requested summary judgment, claiming that it possessed “undisputed evidence” that Kik’s ICO distributed unlicensed securities. Not the same as Telegram’s case Basically, the …
Regulation / April 21, 2020
SEC Enters Settlement Talks With Alleged Fraudulent Firm Veritaseum
The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has entered settlement talks with alleged fraudulent cryptocurrency firm Veritaseum. Initial conference adjourned After filing a complaint against Veritaseum CEO Reginald Middleton and his two companies in August 2019, the SEC said that it is engaged in settlement talks with the defendants, fintech publication FinanceFeeds reports on Oct. 9. According to the report, the regulator filed a motion to adjourn the initial conference at the New York Eastern District Court earlier in October. Following the motion, the court reportedly agreed to reschedule the conference for Nov. 14, 2019. $14.8 million raised through …
Sec / Oct. 9, 2019
Telegram Will Release Bank Records to SEC in Ongoing Gram ICO Case
Telegram will release bank records that the United States Securities Exchange Commission believes will prove misconduct in the latter’s $1.7 billion offering of Gram tokens. International privacy laws and the new information Per a Jan. 13 filing with the court of the Southern District of New York (SDNY), Telegram will have until Feb. 26 to provide the court with the bank records that the court denied the SEC in an earlier ruling that was based on privacy concerns. Today’s ruling will allow Telegram to redact the information provided to the court in accordance with foreign privacy regulations. According to a …
United States / Jan. 13, 2020
US Court Temporarily Freezes $8M in Response to SEC Request Yesterday
A United States District Court has entered an emergency freeze to preserve $8 million of a New York citizen and two of his entities’ related assets following the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) complaint filed on Aug. 12. Per the SEC's announcement published on Aug. 13, the court ordered the temporary freeze of at least $8 million of the $14.8 million raised by the defendants. The sum was reportedly raised by Reginald Middleton and two entities under his management, Veritaseum, Inc. and Veritaseum, LLC, in 2017 and 2018 by conducting an allegedly fraudulent and unregistered initial coin offering. The …
United States / Aug. 13, 2019