This Week on Crypto Twitter: Elon Musk Evasive on Deal Status, Do Kwon Denies New Allegations
Michael Saylor praised a crypto-friendly Lummis/Gillibrand proposal, and SEC suits are allegedly leaving over frustrations with Gary Gensler.
It was a challenging week for the crypto community as the leading coins fell yet again. As usual on Crypto Twitter, prices were everyone’s least concern. Instead, the drama centered on the seemingly interminable saga of Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s bid to buy Twitter. There were also more accusations of foul play leveled at Terraform Labs CEO Do Kwon in the wake of UST’s collapse.
On Monday, Musk made it clear in a letter to Twitter’s General Counsel that his $44 billion acquisition bid is “temporarily on hold” pending confirmation that less than 5% of the microblogging platform’s users are spambots.
Alex Weprin, a journalist for The Hollywood Reporter, argued that Musk's latest move was either tactical or a sign of cold feet. ’s EIC thinks Musk's gripe about bots is his attempt to back out of the deal. Musk's apparent wiggling was the talk of Crypto Twitter, since many in the community have high hopes for the crypto features Musk would implement if he does buy Twitter.
To be crystal clear: The deal is still on as of right now, but this is the first step in what could be a legal battle to negotiate a lower price, or a termination.
— Alex Weprin (@alexweprin) June 6, 2022
Musk remained tight-lipped about the deal on his account, although he later shared a meme about YouTube content monitoring tweeted to him by a follower.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 7, 2022
Musk also shared a laugh with Twitter’s Bitcoin-maxi co-founder Jack Dorsey about creating a Dogecoin-powered “Web69” together.
web69 is 🔥🔥
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 11, 2022
Grayscale continues ETF push
On Tuesday, crypto asset manager Grayscale, which stewards $43.6 billion as of the end of last year, tweeted a short thread on its decision to hire Donald Virilli Jr., former U.S. Solicitor General under President Obama, in the firm’s ongoing campaign to convert its world-leading Bitcoin fund into an SEC-approved ETF.
As we enter the final month before a response is due on our application to convert $GBTC to an ETF, we have retained Donald B. Verrilli, Jr., former Solicitor General of the United States, as additional legal counsel.
— Grayscale (@Grayscale) June 7, 2022
Grayscale began the formal application in October last year and expects an answer from the SEC by July 6. Grayscale also recently launched an advertising campaign asking consumers to help by advocating for the ETF directly to the SEC in writing. Should the company succeed, it would be the first regulated spot ETF crypto product in the United States.
Solana vs Defi Safety
Also on Tuesday, decentralized finance watchdog DeFi Safety ranked Solana the second worst blockchain out of the fifteen it has ranked so far, putting the chain only above Axie Infinity in terms of technical risk. The ranking came a week after Solana’s third major crash of the year. DeFi Safety unpacked its findings in a mammoth 28-tweet thread, some of which were .
1/28 Due to repeated downtime, @solana has the second worst final technical risk score of the 15 chains that we have reviewed so far. Only @Ronin_Network has a lower score at this point. This is for a variety of reasons. 🫤 pic.twitter.com/GLhugXmPi8
— DeFiSafety (@DefiSafety) June 7, 2022
On Wednesday, Bitcoin maximalist MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor tweeted a clip from an interview with CNBC with the words: “If #bitcoin is not going to zero then it’s going to a million.”
If #bitcoin is not going to zero then it’s going to a million. pic.twitter.com/uY673NAMPf
— Michael Saylor⚡️ (@saylor) June 8, 2022
MicroStrategy currently holds $3.5 billion in Bitcoin at today’s prices. In the clip, Saylor pointed to the bipartisan Responsible Financial Innovation Act
Frustrations with Gensler inside the SEC?
Also on Wednesday, writer Sujeet Indap shared screenshots from subscription-only law publication Law360 that alleges SEC lawyers are leaving the federal agency because of SEC Chair Gary Gensler’s alleged proclivity to draw out cases indefinitely, rather than settling them.
In light of the gossip, one can only wonder where the SEC’s case against Ripple fits into this.
SEC lawyers quitting because Gensler wants to litigate cases not settle:https://t.co/WmC4W8GrEV pic.twitter.com/MhiAeAylkq
— Sujeet Indap (@sindap) June 8, 2022
More trouble for Do Kwon
In the fallout from Terra’s collapse, this week it was the SEC’s turn to crank up the heat on Terraform Labs CEO Do Kwon.
Meanwhile, in a separate Do Kwon legal issue, his appeal of a September 2021 SEC subpoena was overruled on Wednesday when a U.S. court determined he must comply with investigations into Mirror Protocol.
On top of all that, Kwon has been accused by the South Korean press of having committed several financial crimes, including tax evasion, fraud and insider trading.
The local press was back at it this week, this time accusing Kwon of allegedly cashing out $80 million a month from Terra and sending it to secret wallets for an eye-watering total of $2.7 billion. A number of big Crypto Twitter influencer accounts amplified the claim on Saturday.
Kwon took to Twitter on Sunday to insist his innocence in a sharp thread.
1/ This should be obvious, but the claim that I cashed out $2.7B from anything is categorically false
— Do Kwon 🌕 (@stablekwon) June 12, 2022
Kwon says he took only a “nominal cash salary” from Terraform Labs. “I lost most of what I had in the crash too,” he added. “I’ve said this multiple times but I really don’t care about money much.”
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