Sushi DAO proposed the creation of a legal defense fund March 21 in response to the “recent” subpoena of Sushi head Jared Grey and the decentralized autonomous organization (DAO) itself by the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The DAO’s proposal did not provide details about the SEC subpoena. It stated that it was cooperating with the SEC and, “We do not intend to comment publicly on ongoing investigations or other legal matters.” One community member commented:
Japan-based Sushi DAO operates the SushiSwap decentralized exchange using the SushiSwap (SUSH) token. The DAO proposed a redesign of SUSH tokenomics at the end of last year after losing $30 million on incentives for liquidity providers in 2022.
Sushi created a legal entity “to reduce liability” and then that entity and an individual associated with it got subpoenaed.PSA: if there’s an entity, it’s not a DAODon’t let lawyers talk you into incorporation… unless you want to be a corporation. https://t.co/DATkdiPTCs
The new proposal suggests dedicating $3 million to the fund, with a top-up of $1 million if needed. Sales of SUSH would pay for 15% of the fund. It pointed out that Maker DAO proposed a similar fund in December. Sushi first created a legal defense fund in March 2022, with funding of between $85,000 and $100,000.
Related: Gary Gensler’s SEC is playing a game, but not the one you think
Sushi is reportedly the first DAO the SEC has “targeted” under the chairmanship of Gary Gensler, although the agency is widely seen as cracking down on the crypto industry in recent months. It has concentrated on staking and custody in particular. In February, the SEC forced centralized exchange Kraken to discontinue its staking service for U.S.
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