
According to court papers filed on Tuesday, Coinbase has pushed back hard against the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporationâs latest bid to toss out its Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.
The exchange wants more details about so-called âpause lettersâ that the FDIC allegedly sent to banks, telling them to step away from crypto services. Now, Coinbase is asking a judge to force the FDIC to explain under oath how it handled those records and to hand over all FOIA denial letters issued between 2020 and 2024.
Reports Shed Light On Pause Letters
Based on reports, the FDIC first applied a broad exemption to hide the letters as âconfidential bank examination records.â It paid no mind to sorting facts from analysis.
Coinbase notes that it took four court orders and six separate document productions for the regulator to cough up the key files. That drawn-out process, the exchange argues, shows that the agency still âstonewalls our efforts to shed lightâ on past moves that targeted crypto.
Coinbaseâs Chief Legal Officer, Paul Grewal, wrote on X that the FDIC staff âcontinue to stonewall our effortsâ and that these tactics âcanât and wonât stand.â
We also filed a motion to take additional discovery from the FDIC to get to the bottom of their FOIA practices, which as weâve seen in our case are far from what the law requires. The agency should testify via a 30(b)(6) deposition and produce the letters it sends to FOIAâŠ
â paulgrewal.eth (@iampaulgrewal) July 31, 2025
FDIC Procedures Under Review
Reports have disclosed that internal FDIC policy tells examiners to withhold any document touching on Exemption 8 in full, with âno duty to segregate factual from analytical or deliberative material.â
In a January hearing, regulators admitted they had no formal litigation-hold process for FOIA requests. The initial search also focused only on documents shared with the agencyâs Office of Inspector General.
That narrow scope meant important emails and memosâones that mention âpause lettersâ directlyâwere missed at first.
Banking Access Takes Hit
According to an AIMA survey, 75% of crypto funds struggle to get basic banking services. That squeeze on banking partners has snarled transactions and settlement options for firms like Coinbase.
Banks are now wary of any hint of regulatory risk. If the court orders more sworn testimony, it could shine a light on who really signed off on the âpause letters,â and why examiners thought they had to hide so much.
In its motion for further discovery, Coinbase also wants every FOIA denial letter the FDIC sent over a four-year stretch. Itâs asking for sworn statements from FDIC officials about how they decided which records to keep secret.
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