
Gemini has accused the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) staff of waging a âtrophy-hunting lawfareâ campaign based on âfabricatedâ statements and unfairly weaponizing the Commodity Exchange Act (CEA) against the crypto exchange for over seven years.
Gemini Slams DOE Staff Conduct
Last week, Gemini Trust sent a letter to the Commodity Futures Trading Commissionâs Inspector General, Christopher Skinner, to raise multiple concerns and complaints about the agencyâs Division of Enforcement (DOE) conduct against the crypto exchange over the past seven years.
The June 13 letter accuses the DOE staff of âselectively and unfairlyâ weaponizing the Commodity Exchange Act to âbring dubious false statements charges against Gemini Trustâ and âtaking a series of legal positions that are contrary to basic principles of due process and good governance.â

Gemini’s letter to Inspector General Skinner. Source: Eleanor Terret on X
In 2022, the CFTC sued Gemini, claiming that the exchange issued âfalse and misleading statementsâ regarding its actions to prevent market manipulation in Bitcoin (BTC) prices in 2017.  The complaint alleged that the crypto exchange gave deceiving information to the CFTC as it evaluated a possible self-certification for a BTC futures contract.
In January 2025, Gemini Trust agreed to pay $5 million to the CFTC to resolve the allegations. However, it claims in Fridayâs letter that it didnât settle because it had done anything wrong, but rather âbecause it had no other choiceâ at the time.
According to Gemini, the agencyâs staff conduct over the past seven years shows that its âtrophy-hunting lawfareâ was not motivated by a desire to protect the commodities markets. Instead, it was allegedly driven by the DOE personnelâs âselfish desire to advance their careers by misusing their offices to obtain a high-profile âwin.ââ
Additionally, the company argues that the DOE ignored the fact that Gemini Trust was âthe victim of fraudulent activity by multiple bad actorsâ or that the claims originated from a âlie-riddled whistleblower submission by a discredited former employee,â former CPO Benjamin Small, who reportedly embarked on a âvindictive campaignâ after he was fired.
Based on this, the letter claims that the DOE Staff consistently abused their office and willingly burned millions of dollars of taxpayer money to sue an âinnocent partyâ and âpursue fabricated and manufactured claims against Gemini Trust.â
CFTC To Restore Regulatory Clarity
The crypto exchange also claimed that âthere is something deeply wrong with the DOE and its culture,â adding that it is well known that the division is âout of controlâ with a âtoxicâ philosophy.
They consider that the public statements and remarks from CFTC acting chair Caroline Pham have shown how the DOE âhas lost its way.â Recently, she criticized the previous administrationâs âregulation by enforcementâ approach, affirming that the agency is working to restore regulatory clarity.
As reported by Bitcoinist, Pham slammed the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the CFTCâs previous reinterpretation of existing laws to persecute what they perceived as âbadâ or âevilâ sectors, like crypto and blockchain technology.
The agencyâs acting chair claimed that the CFTC will no longer âtwist the law to criminalize an asset class or a technology,â focusing instead on its âcore missionâ to catch bad actors and prevent fraud, manipulation, and scammers in the market.
However, she clarified that regulations wonât be easy on the crypto industry, or anybody, despite the agencyâs new pro-innovation approach. As such, ârestoring the well-settled legal precedents, how the CFTC has applied and interpreted the law for decades,â has been a priority under her leadership.
Gemini Trust concluded in the letter that the CFTCâs transformation âwill require serious introspection and long-term commitment from the agency as a whole to ensure that this bad-faith behavior never happens again,â and offered to âassist the Commission and Inspector General in whatever capacity they would deem helpful.â

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