The lenders of the bankrupt cryptocurrency lender Genesis are not satisfied with the latest in-principle settlement agreement with other parties including the Digital Currency Group (DCG).
The Ad Hoc Group of Genesis Global Capital (GGC) lenders — represented by lawyers Brian Rosen and Jordan Sazant — on Aug. 29 responded to a public bankruptcy plan update, calling the reached in-principle agreement “wholly insufficient.”
Posted hours before, the public update said that DCG reached an agreement in principle with Genesis’ unsecured creditors (UCC) and debtors, proposing USD equivalent recoveries of 70%–90%. The update stressed that neither the Ad Hoc Group nor the Gemini exchange supported the deal in principle described in the plan update.
“Although the mediation has terminated, constructive discussions with the Ad Hoc Group and Gemini regarding the aforementioned agreed-upon deal in principle are ongoing,” the update noted.
In response, the Ad Hoc Group stressed that it indeed does not support the proposed agreement in principle, calling DCG’s contribution “wholly insufficient to satisfy” the loan amounts. The lenders argued that the debtors and UCC are “unwilling to comply with their fiduciary obligations” to maximize creditor recoveries, arguing that they are instead trying to put the base behind them. The filing added:
“The Ad Hoc Group, which includes dozens of creditors for whom these assets are critical, does not have such luxury and cannot support the proposed terms of the plan update which permit DCG to walk away untouched and, in fact, paying less than already committed.”
The Genesis lenders also argued that DCG should not be entitled to non-consensual third party releases, which release non-debtor parties from liability to other non-debtor parties without the consent of all potential claimholders.
The Ad Hoc Group argued that the debtors and UCC have agreed to “improperly cause the release of third party claims” against DCG and its related parties.
“Instead of receiving $630 million that matured and should have been paid 3 months ago, DCG will only be paying $275 million now and will pay another $328.8 million in another 2 years,” the lenders stated, adding:
“There is no conceivable scenario where these contributions can be considered to be a substantial contribution of assets sufficient to merit releases from the estate claims, let alone third-party creditor claims.”
Genesis is among cryptocurrency lending firms that were affected by the cryptocurrency winter of 2022. The lender filed for bankruptcy in January 2023 after suspending withdrawals amid a massive liquidity crisis in mid-November 2022. The firm reportedly owed more than $3.5 billion to its top 50 creditors, including firms like Gemini.
Kemi Badenoch is to launch a review into whether the UK should leave the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) – and set out plans to revive a Rwanda-style deportation scheme.
In a speech on Friday, the Conservative leader will announce a commission into how lawyers could be prevented from using international legislation to block government decisions on immigration.
She will also announce plans to prevent people who arrive by small boat from claiming asylum and deport them to a third country.
It is unclear if this would be Rwanda or another location.
One of Labour’s first acts in government was to scrap the Tories’ Rwanda scheme, which would have deported illegal immigrations to the African nation for them to claim asylum there.
The plan was held up by a series of legal challenges and ultimately failed to get off the ground before the election, despite around £700m being spent on it, according to the Home Office.
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The saga sparked a debate within the Tory party about whether the UK would need to leave the ECHR, which was established after the Second World War and sets out the rights and freedoms of people in the 46 countries signed up to it.
During the Conservative leadership race, Ms Badenochsaid leaving the ECHR wasn’t a “silver bullet” and “not even the most radical thing that we probably will have to do” to control immigration.
It put her at odds with her rival Robert Jenrick, now the shadow justice secretary, who claimed the Tories would “die” if they did not back exiting the ECHR.
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‘Britain has lost control of its borders’
Ms Badenoch’s commission will be chaired by Tory peer and former justice minister Lord Wolfson of Tredegar, the shadow attorney general.
A Conservative Party aide close to the detail said: “Kemi has worked hard to bring the shadow cabinet together on this very difficult issue.
“She has always said she will take her time to build a proper, workable plan to tackle the issue of the courts subverting parliamentary democracy. This commission, led by the brilliant lawyer Lord Wolfson, will make sure we’re ready to take the tough decisions.”
Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, who has enjoyed a meteoric rise in the polls since the general election, has also said he would leave the ECHR.
Image: Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda plan failed to get off the ground
Labour’s policy is to remain in it, but to bring forward legislation to “ensure it is the government and parliament that decides who should have the right to remain in the UK”.
According to the immigration white paper unveiled last month, this would address cases where Article 8 right to family life legal arguments have been used to frustrate deportation, often in the case of foreign criminals.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper told the Home Affairs Select Committee on Tuesday that family migration has become “so complex” that courts are applying “exceptional” human rights guarantees to about a third of cases.
She said: “The proportion of decisions being taken as exceptional – often under interpretations around Article 8 – end up being about 30 percent of the cases. That is not exceptional, that is a much broader proportion.”
However, she rejected calls to disapply the ECHR, saying compliance with international law has helped the government strike deals with France and Germany to help crack down on criminal gangs.
She said the government will draw up a “clear framework” that will be “much easier for the courts to interpret and will reflect what the public want to see”.
Bitcoin-friendly European Parliament MEP Sarah Knafo says Europe is still at the very beginning of the digital revolution, which will help it compete with economies like China and the US.