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Four protesters have pleaded not guilty to criminal damage after Greenpeace activists draped Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s home with anti-oil and gas banners last year.

Amy Rugg-Easey, 33, Alexandra Wilson, 32, and Michael Grant, 64, appeared at York Magistrates’ Court over the demonstration at Mr Sunak‘s house in Kirby Sigston, near Northallerton, on 3 August.

A fourth protester, Mathieu Soete, 38, appeared via video-link for the hearing on Thursday.

The four defendants denied the charge of damaging roof slates to a value of less than £5,000 belonging to Mr Sunak and Akshata Murty.

District Judge Adrian Lower set a date of 23 July for the start of the two-day trial.

The group were bailed, with the condition of not entering the parish of Kirby Sigston.

Greenpeace claimed at the time of the protests that no damage was caused to the property, and they decided to carry out the action when the prime minister and his family were in California.

More on Rishi Sunak

Following today’s events, Greenpeace’s Mel Evans said: “This protest took place at Sunak’s house in his Yorkshire constituency, when it was widely reported in the national news that the PM and his family were abroad, holidaying in California.

“England has just experienced our wettest eighteen months on record, hundreds of UK homes and farms have been hit by floods and millions spent another winter in fuel poverty while the prime minister continues to support oil and gas expansion, fuelling extreme weather and doing nothing to lower energy bills.

“The government can try to silence protest, but not the weather, and the damage and cost will keep racking up so long as we stick to the same self-destructive policies.”

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CFTC greenlights spot crypto trading on US exchanges

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CFTC greenlights spot crypto trading on US exchanges

The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has given approval for spot cryptocurrency products to trade on federally regulated futures exchanges.

In a Thursday notice, Acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham said the move was in response to policy directives from US President Donald Trump. She added that the approval followed recommendations by the President’s Working Group on Digital Asset Markets, engagement with the US Securities and Exchange Commission and consultations from the CFTC’s “Crypto Sprint” initiative.

“[F]or the first time ever, spot crypto can trade on CFTC-registered exchanges that have been the gold standard for nearly a hundred years, with the customer protections and market integrity that Americans deserve,” said Pham.

Investments, SEC, Cryptocurrency Exchange, Trading
Source: Acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham

Pham, who became acting CFTC chair in January amid Trump’s taking office, is expected to step down once the US Senate confirms a replacement. The nomination of Michael Selig, an SEC official whom Trump nominated to chair the CFTC, is expected to head to the Senate floor for a vote soon after moving out of committee. 

Related: Acting CFTC chair seeks CEOs for ‘innovation council,’ citing crypto policy

One of the derivatives exchanges poised to be among the first to begin enacting trading is Bitnomial, which scheduled its launch for next week. The exchange is authorized to operate under the CFTC as a Designated Contract Market, which Coinbase also obtained in 2020.

Awaiting market structure, new leadership at CFTC

In addition to Selig’s nomination under consideration in the Senate, the CFTC has four empty commissioner seats on its leadership. As of Thursday, Trump had not announced any potential replacements for the regulator.

Also expected soon is for US senators to advance a digital asset market structure bill, legislation expected to lay out clear regulatory roles for the CFTC and SEC over cryptocurrencies. Discussion drafts of possible frameworks would give the CFTC more authority to regulate digital assets.