Securities and Exchange Commission v. Telegram Group Inc.
Answer to Complaint — Document #37
District Court, S.D. New York
Description
ANSWER to [1] Complaint. Document filed by Telegram Group Inc., Ton Issuer Inc..(Musoff, Scott)
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 1 of 35
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, :
: 19 Civ. 9439 (PKC)
Plaintiff, :
: ECF Case
-against- :
: Electronically Filed
TELEGRAM GROUP INC. and TON ISSUER INC., :
:
Defendants. :
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DEFENDANTS’ ANSWER, DEFENSES AND
AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSES TO PLAINTIFF’S COMPLAINT
Defendants Telegram Group Inc. (“Telegram”) and TON Issuer Inc (collectively,
“Defendants”), by and through their undersigned counsel, hereby answer the Complaint of
Plaintiff Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC” or “Plaintiff”) as follows1:
1. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 1, except admit that Telegram is the
owner of the mobile messaging application Telegram Messenger. To the contrary, Plaintiff’s
claims are without merit as Telegram’s private placement to highly sophisticated, accredited
investors was conducted pursuant to valid exemptions to registration under the federal securities
laws and Grams will not be securities when they are created at the time of launch of the TON
Blockchain. As set forth below in connection with Defendants’ affirmative and other defenses,
Plaintiff has engaged in improper “regulation by enforcement” in this nascent area of the law,
failed to provide clear guidance and fair notice of its views as to what conduct constitutes a
violation of the federal securities laws, and has now adopted an ad hoc legal position that is
contrary to judicial precedent and the publicly expressed views of its own high-ranking officials.
1
To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations contained in all headings, titles, captions,
footnotes or charts in the Complaint.
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 2 of 35
As Plaintiff was well aware based on its regular communications with Defendants over the past
nearly two years, Defendants voluntarily engaged with Plaintiff for the specific purpose of
obtaining meaningful guidance on these issues and to avoid any violations of the federal
securities laws, which Plaintiff failed to provide prior to bringing this enforcement action.
2. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 2, except admit that Defendants
engaged in a legal private placement pursuant to valid exemptions to registration between
January 2018 and March 2018 through which they raised approximately $1.7 billion from 171
purchasers and used the proceeds of the placement, in part, to finance the creation and
development of the TON Blockchain.
3. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 3. Grams do not exist yet but if and
when they do, they will constitute a currency and/or commodity — not securities under the
federal securities laws.
4. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 4, except admit that Telegram has
not filed any registration statement with the SEC because none was, is or will be required under
the federal securities laws.
5. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 5.
6. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 6.
7. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 7.
8. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 8.
9. The allegations in Paragraph 9 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 9.
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10. The allegations in Paragraph 10 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 10.
11. The allegations in Paragraph 11 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required.
12. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 12 or that Plaintiff is entitled to any
of the relief sought in this action.
13. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 13 or that Plaintiff is entitled to any
of the relief sought in this action.
14. The allegations in Paragraph 14 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required.
15. The allegations in Paragraph 15 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any additional response is required, Defendants deny the
allegations in Paragraph 15.
16. Defendants admit the allegations in Paragraph 16.
17. Defendants admit the allegations in Paragraph 17.
18. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 18, except admit that Pavel Durov is
a Russian and St. Kitts and Nevis citizen; that he founded a website called VKontakte; that he is
the co-founder and CEO of Telegram Group Inc.; that he has been an outspoken critic of the
Russian government; and that he lost ownership and control over VKontakte and left Russia.
19. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 19, except admit that Nikolai Durov
is a Russian citizen; that he is a co-founder and CTO of Telegram Group Inc.; and that he is
Pavel Durov’s brother.
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20. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 20.
21. The allegations in Paragraph 21 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the Securities Act, which speaks for itself.
22. The allegations in Paragraph 22 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act, which speak for
themselves.
23. The allegations in Paragraph 23 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the Securities Act, which speaks for itself.
24. The allegations in Paragraph 24 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the referenced forms and provisions, which speaks for itself.
25. The allegations in Paragraph 25 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the Securities Act, which speaks for itself.
26. The allegations in Paragraph 26 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the Securities Act, which speaks for itself.
27. The allegations in Paragraph 27 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants respectfully refer the
Court to the actual text of the Securities Act, which speaks for itself.
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28. The allegations in Paragraph 28 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 28.
29. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 29 on the ground that the terms used
therein, including “digital asset,” “digital token,” “blockchain technology,” “ICOs,” and others,
involve circumstances, facts and details which vary significantly.
30. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 30 on the ground that the terms used
therein, including “digital token,” involve circumstances, facts and details which vary
significantly.
31. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 31 on the ground that the terms used
therein, including “white paper” and “blockchain,” involve circumstances, facts and details
which vary significantly.
32. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 32 on the ground that the terms used
therein, including “digital tokens,” involve circumstances, facts and details which vary
significantly.
33. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 33, and respectfully refer the Court
to the “DAO Report” for its true and complete contents.
34. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 34, except admit that Telegram
Messenger was launched in late 2013 in beta version and Telegram is a not-for-profit company
that does not make any money from Messenger, and respectfully refer the Court to Telegram’s
website for the true and complete statements contained therein.
35. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 35, except admit that Telegram
Messenger includes a wide variety of features, including, among others, Secret Chats, and seeks
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to protect its users’ privacy. Defendants respectfully refer the Court to Defendants’ website for
the true and complete statements contained therein.
36. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 36, except admit that Telegram estimates that it currently
has more than 300 million users, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced sources for
their true and complete contents.
37. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 37, except admit that Messenger
incorporates functionality to allow users to buy goods and services from providers and that Pavel
Durov and Nikolai Durov concluded that Bitcoin and Ethereum blockchains have certain
limitations that prevented their widespread adoption as bona fide currencies, which they have
attempted to solve with Grams.
38. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 38, except admit that Telegram
announced the “Telegram Open Network” in late 2017 and that Plaintiff purports to quote from
certain materials, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced sources for their true and
complete contents.
39. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 39, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced sources
for their true and complete contents.
40. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 40.
41. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 41, except admit that from January
through March 2018, Telegram entered into certain purchase agreements with private placement
purchasers under which the purchasers received an entitlement to an allocation of Grams only in
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the event that a fully functional TON Blockchain platform was successfully built and launched,
and respectfully refer the Court to the purchase agreements for their true and complete contents.
42. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 42, except admit that the purchase
agreements originally defined the “Deadline Date” as October 31, 2019, and respectfully refer
the Court to the purchase agreements and any amendments thereto for their true and complete
contents.
43. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 43.
44. Defendants admit the allegations of Paragraph 44, except deny the allegation in
the last sentence of Paragraph 44.
45. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 45, and respectfully refer the Court
to the purchase agreements for their true and complete contents. Defendants further incorporate
by reference their answer to Paragraph 87 as if set forth fully herein.
46. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 46, except admit that they have not
filed any registration statements with the SEC regarding Grams or the TON Blockchain because
none were required.
47. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 47, and respectfully refer the Court
to the purchase agreements and all related documents for their true and complete contents.
48. Defendants deny the allegations of Paragraph 48.
49. Defendants admit the allegations in Paragraph 49 insofar as it purports to
characterize Telegram’s position that the purchase agreements were treated as investment
contracts, on which Telegram placed a restrictive legend that restricted the ability to offer, sell or
transfer them, and respectfully refer the Court to the purchase agreements for their true and
complete contents.
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50. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 50, except admit that Telegram
believes that Grams are not a security and will not be a security at the time of the launch of the
TON Blockchain, and thus that Grams are not required to be restricted or contain restrictive
legends (to the extent it is even possible to include a restrictive legend on them), and that certain
private placement purchasers will be subject to certain lockup provisions regarding Grams
following the launch of the TON Blockchain.
51. The allegations in Paragraph 51 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 51.
52. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 52, except admit that the round one
private placement purchasers are subject to certain lockup restrictions with respect to any Grams
that may be delivered pursuant to the purchase agreements, and respectfully refer the Court to the
purchase agreements for their true and complete contents.
53. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 53.
54. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 54.
55. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 55, except admit that Telegram
disclosed to private placement purchasers that not all of the funds raised in the private placement
would be used to develop the TON Blockchain and provided certain estimates to the private
placement purchasers, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced materials and purchase
agreements for their true and complete contents.
56. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 56, except admit that as of January
31, 2019, Defendants had used approximately $218 million of the $1.7 billion raised and that
Telegram disclosed to private purchasers how funds raised in the private placement could be
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used, and respectfully refer the Court to the offering materials and purchase agreements for their
true and complete contents.
57. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to what
the “Initial Purchasers” understood, and otherwise deny the allegations in Paragraph 57.
58. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 58, except admit that Telegram
provided private placement purchasers with certain materials regarding the TON Blockchain and
Grams, and respectfully refer the Court to these materials for their true and complete contents.
59. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to what
potential purchasers read, and otherwise deny the allegations in Paragraph 59, except admit that
Telegram employees provided certain materials to potential purchasers regarding the TON
Blockchain and Grams, and respectfully refer the Court to those materials for their true and
complete content.
60. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 60, except admit that Pavel Durov
had discussions with certain purchasers and potential purchasers regarding the private placement
and Grams.
61. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 61, and respectfully refer the Court
to the purchase agreements for their true and complete contents.
62. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 62, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced communications for their true and complete contents.
63. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 63, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
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64. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 64, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
65. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 65, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
66. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 66, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
67. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 67, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
68. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 68.
69. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 69.
70. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 70, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
71. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 71, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to those documents
for their true and complete contents.
72. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 72, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced document and all related documents for their true and complete contents.
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73. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 73, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
74. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 74, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
75. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 75, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced documents and all related documents for their true and complete contents.
76. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 76, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced communications for their true and complete contents.
77. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 77, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced materials for their true and complete contents.
78. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 78, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
communication for its true and complete contents.
79. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 79, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced materials for their true and complete contents.
80. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 80, except deny knowledge or
information sufficient to form a belief as to the purported announcement referenced in Paragraph
80.
81. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 81, except deny the allegations in the last sentence of
Paragraph 81.
82. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 82.
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83. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 83, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
84. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 84, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
85. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 85, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
86. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 86.
87. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 87.
88. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 88, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
89. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 89, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced document for its true and complete contents.
90. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 90, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
91. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 91, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
92. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 92, and respectfully refer the Court
to the referenced document for its true and complete contents.
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93. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 93, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
94. Defendants deny knowledge or information regarding the truth of the allegations
in Paragraph 94, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced document for its true and
complete contents.
95. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 95.
96. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 96, except admit that the referenced
materials addressed potential future uses of Grams, including as a medium of exchange and other
potential uses, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced documents for their true and
complete contents.
97. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 97, except admit that Plaintiff
purports to quote from certain documents, and respectfully refer the Court to the referenced
documents for their true and complete contents.
98. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 98, except admit that the TON
Blockchain has not launched and Grams do not yet exist and will not exist unless and until the
fully functioning TON Blockchain platform is launched.
99. The allegations in Paragraph 99 purport to state conclusions of law, to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 99.
100. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 100, and respectfully refer the
Court to the referenced document for its true and complete contents.
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101. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 101, and respectfully refer the
Court to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
102. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 102, and respectfully refer the
Court to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
103. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 103, and respectfully refer the
Court to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
104. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 104, and respectfully refer the
Court to the referenced documents for their true and complete contents.
105. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 105 and the accompanying heading,
but admit that Telegram began to roll out a beta version of the TON Blockchain in March 2019,
in order to test the functionality of the TON Blockchain prior to the launch of the TON
Blockchain and any delivery of Grams.
106. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 106, except admit that no Grams
have been delivered to any private placement purchasers.
107. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 107.
108. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 108.
109. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 109.
110. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 110.
111. Defendants deny knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the
truth of the allegations in Paragraph 111.
112. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 112, except admit that Defendants
have not filed a registration statement with the SEC because none is required.
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113. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 113, except admit that Defendants
have not filed a registration statement with the SEC because none is required.
114. The allegations in Paragraph 114 purport to state conclusions of law to which no
response is required. To the extent any response is required, Defendants deny the allegations in
Paragraph 114.
115. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 115, except admit that Telegram has
stated to the SEC that its contemplated TON Wallet application will be non-custodial, meaning
that Telegram will have no greater insight or access to transactions on the TON Blockchain than
any other user of the TON Blockchain.
116. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 116.
117. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 117.
118. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 118.
119. Defendants incorporate by reference each of the above answers as though fully set
forth herein.
120. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 120.
121. Defendants deny the allegations in Paragraph 121.
Defendants deny that Plaintiff is entitled to any relief, and respectfully request that the
Court dismiss the claims against Defendants with prejudice and order such further relief as the
Court deems just and proper.
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GENERAL DENIAL
Defendants deny each and every allegation, statement, matter, and thing in the
Complaint not expressly admitted or qualified herein.
DEFENDANTS’ AFFIRMATIVE AND OTHER DEFENSES
1. Without assuming the burden of proof on any matters where that burden rests on
Plaintiff, Defendants assert the following affirmative and other defenses with respect to the
claims Plaintiff purports to assert in the Complaint.
2. “A fundamental principle in our legal system is that laws which regulate persons
or entities must give fair notice of conduct that is forbidden or required. This requirement of
clarity in regulation is essential to the protections provided by the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment.” F.C.C. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 567 U.S. 239, 253 (2012) (citations
omitted). “A conviction or punishment fails to comply with due process if the statute or
regulation under which it is obtained ‘fails to provide a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice
of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that it authorizes or encourages seriously
discriminatory enforcement.’” Id. (quoting United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 304 (2008)).
3. Where an enforcement action serves as the “‘initial means for announcing a
particular interpretation’—or for making [the agency’s] interpretation clear,” the court “must ask
whether the regulated party received, or should have received, notice of the agency’s
interpretation in the most obvious way of all: by reading the regulations.” Gen. Elec. Co. v. U.S.
E.P.A., 53 F.3d 1324, 1329 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (citation omitted). “If, by reviewing the regulations
and other public statements issued by the agency, a regulated party acting in good faith would be
able to identify, with ‘ascertainable certainty,’ the standards with which the agency expects
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parties to conform, then the agency has fairly notified a petitioner of the agency’s interpretation.”
Id. (quoting Diamond Roofing Co. v. OSHRC, 528 F.2d 645, 649 (5th Cir. 1976)).
4. When evaluating an “as-applied” challenge to a statute for vagueness, the Second
Circuit employs a “two-part test: a court must first determine whether the statute gives the person
of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited and then consider
whether the law provides explicit standards for those who apply it.” Farrell v. Burke, 449 F.3d
470, 486, 494 (2d Cir. 2006) (citation omitted) (Sotomayor, J.) (adding that, with respect to the
second prong, a court may determine “either (1) that a statute as a general matter provides
sufficiently clear standards to eliminate the risk of arbitrary enforcement or (2) that, even in the
absence of such standards, the conduct at issue falls within the core of the statute’s prohibition,
so that the enforcement before the court was not the result of the unfettered latitude that law
enforcement officers and factfinders might have in other, hypothetical applications of the
statute”).
5. Here, Telegram has not been provided legally and constitutionally sufficient
notice that its actions do and would violate the Securities Act of 1933. The term “investment
contract,” in this context, is open-ended: while the Supreme Court interpreted it in Howey, the
application of Howey to digital assets raises unique issues that require more specific guidance to
avoid trapping the unwary. But to date, the SEC has failed to provide consistent and meaningful
guidance on whether and how it will regulate cryptocurrencies like Grams. Moreover, the SEC
never provided fair notice that it believed Telegram’s actions had violated and would violate the
federal securities law, even as it knew Telegram was expending significant time and resources,
including investor funds, to prepare to launch the TON Blockchain and Grams.
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A. Telegram Conducts a Private Placement
Pursuant to Valid Exemptions to Registration
6. In January 2018, Telegram conducted the first round of a private placement
whereby it raised $850 million from a select group of high-net-worth, highly sophisticated
purchasers (“Private Placement”). The offering was made pursuant to the exemptions to
registration contained in Rule 506(c) of Regulation D (for U.S. purchasers) and Regulation S (for
foreign purchasers) under the Securities Act of 1933.
7. Local counsel was engaged in approximately 30 non-U.S. jurisdictions to advise
on local securities law compliance, while purchasers from certain jurisdictions (for example, all
“sanctioned jurisdictions”) were excluded.
8. The investors in the private placement were highly sophisticated, with an average
investment of approximately $8-10 million. Investors were vetted by third-party Know Your
Customer (“KYC”) providers based on responses to KYC forms and supporting documentation.
9. In the Private Placement, Telegram entered into Purchase Agreements with the
purchasers whereby Telegram agreed to use the funds raised to develop and build the TON
Blockchain. The Purchase Agreements provided that Telegram would only distribute Grams if
the fully functional TON Blockchain was launched, which is a necessary predicate for the
creation of any Grams.
10. The Purchase Agreements also originally provided that if the TON Blockchain
was not developed and launched by October 31, 2019 (i.e., the “Deadline Date”), then Telegram
would return the funds to the Private Placement Purchasers net of any amounts spent under the
Purchase Agreements.
11. On February 13, 2018, Telegram filed its Notice of Exempt Offering of Securities
with the SEC detailing the first round of the private placement.
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12. In March 2018, Telegram completed the second and final round of the Private
Placement whereby it raised another $850 million pursuant to substantially identical procedures
as the first round. On March 29, 2018, Telegram filed its Notice of Exempt Offering of
Securities with the SEC detailing the second round of the Private Placement.
B. The SEC Has Failed to Provide Necessary Clarity
And Notice Regarding the Securities Law Violations
Alleged, Which Has Led to Arbitrary Enforcement
13. Public comments by high-ranking SEC officials have supported Telegram’s good
faith belief that its Private Placement and TON Blockchain project was compliant with the U.S.
securities laws in a new and developing area of the law where the SEC has failed to provide any
concrete public guidance.
14. For example, in a 2017 statement, SEC Chairman Jay Clayton stated the
technology underlying cryptocurrencies may prove to be “disruptive, transformative and
efficiency enhancing,” opining: “I am confident that developments in fintech will help facilitate
capital formation and provide promising investment opportunities for institutional and Main
Street investors alike.” Chairman Clayton added: “It is possible to conduct an [Initial Coin
Offering or “ICO”] without triggering the SEC’s registration requirements. For example, just as
with a Regulation D exempt offering to raise capital for the manufacturing of a physical product,
an initial coin offering that is a security can be structured so that it qualifies for an applicable
exemption from the registration requirements.”2
2
Chairman Jay Clayton, Statement on Cryptocurrencies and Initial Coin Offerings (December 11, 2017),
https://www.sec.gov/news/public-statement/statement-clayton-2017-12-11 (last visited December 20, 2018).
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15. On April 5, 2018, Chairman Clayton suggested that the application of the federal
securities laws to a given cryptocurrency could vary over time, noting that “[j]ust because it’s a
security today doesn’t mean it’ll be a security tomorrow, and vice-versa.”3
16. On June 6, 2018, Chairman Clayton discussed cryptocurrencies in an interview
with CNBC:
“Cryptocurrencies: These are replacements for sovereign currencies, replace the
dollar, the euro, the yen with bitcoin,” Clayton said. “That type of currency is not
a security.” “A token, a digital asset, where I give you my money and you go off
and make a venture, and in return for giving you my money I say ‘you can get a
return’ that is a security and we regulate that,” Clayton said.4
17. During a talk in November 2018, Chairman Clayton gave an example of a digital
asset that starts out as a security but may morph into a non-security asset, by way of analogy,
whereby a person provides funds to producers of a Broadway play in exchange for a suite of
tickets.5 The agreement to provide funds for production costs may be treated as securities
because the ticket holders expect to receive profits from their tickets and while the production is
being built, the tickets may look like a right in the enterprise with a return. However, once the
play is up and running, tickets would provide access to the play and should not be securities.6 At
that point, the production has largely been completed and the work of the promoter is less crucial
to the success of the play, and the tickets granting access to the play are not likely to be
3
Nikhilesh De, SEC Chief Touts Benefits of Crypto Regulation, CoinDesk (April 5, 2018),
https://www.coindesk.com/sec-chief-not-icos-bad.
4
Kate Rooney, SEC Chief Says Agency Won’t Change Securities Laws To Cater To Cryptocurrencies, CNBC (June
6, 2018), https://www.cnbc.com/2018/06/06/sec-chairman-clayton-says-agency-wont-change-definition-of-a-
security.html.
5
Times Talks, SEC Chairman Jay Clayton & Andrew Ross Sorkin (November 29, 2018),
https://www.timestalks.com/talks/timestalksdealbook-andrew-ross-sorkin-and-s-e-c-chairman-jon-clayton/.
6
Id.
20
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 21 of 35
securities, even if there is some trading of tickets in some type of ticket exchange or secondary
market.
18. The SEC’s Director of Corporate Finance, William Hinman, has made similar
public comments. On June 14, 2018, Director Hinman stated:
I believe some industry participants are beginning to realize that, in some
circumstances, it might be easier to start a blockchain-based enterprise in a more
conventional way [than through an “initial coin offering”]. In other words,
conduct the initial funding through a registered or exempt equity or debt offering
and, once the network is up and running, distribute or offer blockchain-based
tokens or coins to participants who need the functionality the network and digital
assets offer. This allows the tokens or coins to be structured and offered in a way
where it is evident that purchasers [post-blockchain launch] are not making an
investment in the development of the enterprise.7
19. Director Hinman continued:
The digital asset itself is simply code. But the way it is sold [determines whether
it is a security.] But this also points the way to when a digital asset transaction
may no longer represent a security offering. If the network on which the token or
coin is to function is sufficiently decentralized—where purchasers would no
longer reasonably expect a person or group to carry out essential managerial or
entrepreneurial efforts—the assets may not represent an investment contract.
Moreover, when the efforts of the third party are no longer a key factor for
determining the enterprise’s success, material information asymmetries recede”
and “the ability to identify an issuer or promoter to make the requisite disclosures
becomes difficult, and less meaningful.8
Director Hinman emphasized that “the analysis of whether something is a security is not static
and does not strictly inhere to the instrument.”9
20. On the basis of this analysis, Director Hinman further opined that
cryptocurrencies Bitcoin and Ether, analyzed “today,” do not resemble securities and thus
7
Director William Hinman, Digital Asset Transactions: When Howey Met Gary (Plastic) (June 14, 2018),
https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/speech-hinman-061418.
8
Id.
9
Id.
21
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 22 of 35
applying the securities laws “would seem to add little value.”10 He added: “Over time, there
may be other sufficiently decentralized networks and systems where regulating the tokens or
coins that function on them as securities may not be required.”11 Director Hinman further stated:
“it is clear I believe a token once offered in a security offering can, depending on the
circumstances, later be offered in a non-securities transaction,” and “I encourage anyone that has
questions on a particular [offering] structure to consult with knowledgeable securities counsel or
the staff.”12
21. In March 2019, in a letter to Rep. Ted Budd, Chairman Clayton publicly endorsed
Director Hinman’s comments, including his opinion that Ether is not a security.13 Chairman
Clayton wrote:
I agree with Director Hinman’s explanation of how a digital asset transaction may
no longer represent an investment contract if, for example, purchasers would no
longer reasonably expect a person or group to carry out the essential managerial
or entrepreneurial efforts. Under those circumstances, the digital asset may not
represent an investment contract under the Howey framework.14
22. In April 2019, the SEC’s Strategic Hub for Innovation and Financial Technology
(“FinHub”) published its “Framework for ‘Investment Contract’ Analysis of Digital Assets”
(“Framework”).15 FinHub specifically stated that the Framework “is not a rule, regulation, or
10
Id.
11
Id.
12
Id.
13
Letter from Jay Clayton to Ted Budd (Mar. 7, 2019), https://coincenter.org/files/2019-03/clayton-token-
response.pdf.
14
Id.
15
SEC, Framework for “Investment Contract” Analysis of Digital Assets (last modified Apr. 3, 2019),
https://www.sec.gov/corpfin/framework-investment-contract-analysis-digital-assets#_edn1.
22
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statement of the Commission, and the Commission has neither approved nor disapproved its
content.”
23. While the Framework states that it provides guidance “for analyzing whether a
digital asset is an investment contract and whether offers and sales of a digital asset are securities
transactions,” the Framework falls far short of this goal.16 Rather, the Framework simply
provides a list of no fewer than 38 factors or “characteristics” (plus nearly 30 additional sub-
factors) that FinHub claims are “especially relevant” to determining one prong of the Howey
test.17 The Framework does not provide any guidance for weighing these numerous factors or
how to apply them to the facts of any particular matter; to the contrary, the Framework states that
“no one of the following characteristics is necessarily determinative” and they are “not intended
to be exhaustive in evaluating whether a digital asset is an investment contract or any other type
of security.”18
24. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce publicly criticized the Framework: “Pages
worth of factors, many of which seemingly apply to all decentralized networks, might contribute
to the feeling that navigating the securities laws in this area is perilous business. Rather than
sorting through the factors or hiring an expensive lawyer to do so, a wary company may
reasonably decide to forgo certain opportunities or to pursue them in a more crypto-friendly
jurisdiction overseas.”19
16
Id.
17
Id.
18
Id.
19
Commissioner Hester M. Peirce, How We Howey (May 9, 2019), https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/peirce-how-
we-howey-050919.
23
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25. The Framework further supported the views of Chairman Clayton and Director
Hinman, set forth above, that an instrument that is deemed a security at one point in time can
become a non-security at a later point in time. Indeed, the Framework specifically splits its
analysis into two different points in time: (1) where the digital asset is originally offered; and (2)
where a “digital asset previously sold as a security should be reevaluated at the time of later
offers or sales.”20 Thus, under the Framework, a digital currency that may have been a security
in one setting may not be a security “at the time of later offers or sales.”21
26. All of the above statements by the SEC and its high-ranking officials—which
have taken the place of any formal SEC rulemaking, interpretation or other Commission action,
and thus remain the only ways in which developers like Telegram can glean any guidance have
been woefully insufficient to provide Telegram with legally and constitutionally required notice
as to whether its conduct violated federal securities laws, and have led to arbitrary enforcement
efforts whereby Bitcoin and Ethereum are presumed to not be securities while other
cryptocurrencies with the same or substantially similar characteristics are deemed to be
securities.
27. In fact, U.S. Representative Warren Davidson recently referred to this approach of
“regulation by enforcement” rather than by guidance—specifically in the context of Grams—as
having “all the charm and inefficiency of third-world power structures.”22 Representative
Davidson further stated:
20
SEC, supra n.15.
21
Id.
22
Kollen Post, Rep. Warren Davidson: You Have to Defend Money to Defend Freedom, Cointelegraph (Oct. 22,
2019), https://cointelegraph.com/news/rep-warren-davidson-you-have-to-defend-money-to-defend-freedom.
24
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 25 of 35
The SEC is doing a complete patchwork of regulation. No one knows where
they're going. They’re literally told if you want to launch a token, whatever you
think you want to do with it, come check with the SEC first. . . . And you can
grovel. If you grovel well enough, then we'll give you a no-action letter. You
have hundreds of companies waiting on no-action letters. They’ve approved two.
You can’t raise capital while you're waiting for that.
....
So what are people doing? They’re like, ‘Screw you guys, we’re just gonna
launch it in Switzerland, Singapore, Malta — wherever.’ And they’re not going
to avoid our laws — we don’t have a law. 23
28. Similarly, the SEC’s approach here flies in the face of a recently issued executive
order, which directs agencies to provide notice-type “above and beyond those” that the Due
Process Clause requires.24 The order emphasizes that actions must be based solely on “standards
of conduct that have been publicly stated in a manner that would not cause unfair surprise.”25
29. Such an approach is also inconsistent with the SEC’s publicly expressed desire to
engage with developers in this area. See, e.g., SEC Press Release 2018-240, SEC Launches New
Strategic Hub for Innovation and Financial Technology (Oct. 18, 2018), https://www.sec.gov/
news/press-release/2018-240. For example, when the SEC announced the launch of FinHub,
Valerie A. Szczepanik, Senior Advisor for Digital Assets and Innovation and Associate Director
in the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance, explained, “By launching FinHub, we hope to
provide a clear path for entrepreneurs, developers, and their advisers to engage with SEC staff,
seek input, and test ideas.” Id. (emphasis added). Additionally, Chairman Clayton stated, “The
SEC is committed to working with investors and market participants on new approaches to
capital formation, market structure, and financial services, with an eye toward enhancing, and in
23
Id. (alteration in original)(emphasis added).
24
EXECUTIVE ORDER ON PROMOTING THE RULE OF LAW THROUGH TRANSPARENCY AND
FAIRNESS IN CIVIL ADMINISTRATIVE ENFORCEMENT AND ADJUDICATION, 2019 WL 5061295, at *1
25
Id. at *3.
25
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no way reducing, investor protection. . . . The FinHub provides a central point of focus for our
efforts to monitor and engage on innovations in the securities markets that hold promise, but
which also require a flexible, prompt regulatory response to execute our mission.” Id.
30. In fact, SEC Commissioner Peirce recently criticized the SEC’s current approach
of leading with enforcement without clear regulatory guidelines.26 As she explained:
I am concerned about how the SEC has regulated this space, because I believe our
lack of a workable regulatory framework has hindered innovation and growth.
The only guidance out of the SEC is a parade of enforcement actions and a set of
staff guidance documents and staff no-action letters. For example, the SEC’s web
page “Spotlight on Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs),” has an “ICO Updates” section
that is headlined by enforcement actions brought by the Commission. Only when
you click through to “More” do you see other materials. Of particular concern is
that these enforcement actions and guidance pieces, taken together, offer no clear
path for a functioning token network to emerge.27
She continued:
Another implication of our enforcement program to which we need to be more
sensitive is the effect enforcement actions have on third parties. We at the
Commission embrace the third-party deterrent message that enforcement actions
convey, but we generally fail to realize how muted that message is. The terms of a
settled enforcement action, for example, may turn on considerations that will not
be obviously determinative to someone reading the facts set forth in the settlement
order. I am thinking of one recent enforcement action that generated quite a buzz
in the crypto world because some thought its penalty was too low relative to the
amount raised in the offering. Yet, there were some underlying facts that might
have argued for the opposite conclusion — that the penalty was too high.28
31. Telegram’s TON project is an entirely new business model, and the SEC’s
position that it fits into the definition of “security” based on existing frameworks is clearly
unreasonable, particularly since Grams align with other cryptocurrencies that the SEC has not
26
Commissioner Hester M. Peirce, Broken Windows: Remarks before the 51st Annual Institute on Securities
Regulation (Nov. 4, 2019), https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/peirce-broken-windows-51st-annual-institute-
securities-regulation.
27
Id. (citations omitted).
28
Id. (citation omitted).
26
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deemed securities. Even though the SEC has recognized that digital currencies present novel
questions under the securities laws, it has not provided any formal, clear or workable guidance
regarding how it would determine whether Grams qualify as securities.
32. A formal rulemaking or at the very least an interpretation or policy statement
from the SEC itself, with commentary from the public, is necessary for a paradigm shift such as
this (the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has at least started this type of process
with a Commission-level proposal and public comment on how to deal with the actual delivery
of cryptocurrency). “Furthermore, deferring to agencies’ litigating positions interpreting statutes
they are charged with administering would create a danger that agencies would avoid
promulgating regulations altogether, given the comparative ease of announcing a new statutory
interpretation in a brief rather than through formal rulemaking. This result would severely
undermine the notice and predictability to regulated parties that formal rulemaking is meant to
promote.” Price v. Stevedoring Servs. of Am., Inc., 697 F.3d 820, 830 (9th Cir. 2012).
33. The SEC repeatedly failed to clarify Telegram’s regulatory obligations despite
Telegram’s stated flexibility and efforts for compliance, and seeks to punish Telegram for
conduct that the SEC now finds to violate the securities laws by imposing severe sanctions.
Grams are intended to be an alternative currency that can be used to buy goods and services on
the TON Blockchain. Grams cannot function as intended — as a medium of exchange — if they
are deemed a security. Given that Grams are intended to function as a currency, which is
expressly defined not to be a security and cannot function as intended if classified as a security,
and given the recognition by the Chairman of the Commission and high-ranking staff that digital
currencies can morph from a security into a non-security — a characteristic that the SEC’s
27
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 28 of 35
claims in this action do not appear to even address — the need for regulatory clarity here is
paramount but entirely absent.
34. As particularly relevant here, the SEC has not initiated any actions with respect to
cryptocurrencies Bitcoin and Ether, which share similar characteristics with Grams.
C. The SEC Failed to Provide Guidance While
Telegram Was Expending Funds to Build the TON Blockchain
35. Against this backdrop of public uncertainty and the SEC’s repeated invitations for
developers to engage with its staff on the specifics of their particular projects, Telegram
attempted to receive SEC guidance and feedback on the TON Blockchain.
36. On February 2, 2018, counsel for Telegram reached out to the SEC regarding the
TON Blockchain platform. That same day, the SEC sent a letter to “Telegram LLC” which
stated that “[t]he staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission is conducting an investigation
in the matter identified above and requests that your client, Telegram LLC (‘Telegram’),
voluntarily produce to the staff” a number of categories of documents. Both sides agreed to the
scope of Telegram’s voluntary production of documents, and over the next 18 months, Telegram
engaged in good faith and voluntary discussions with the SEC in order to explain the details of
its project and to obtain guidance regarding the potential application of the federal securities
laws.
37. During this time, Telegram voluntarily: (i) provided productions of thousands of
pages of messages and communications with U.S. purchasers; (ii) submitted a detailed legal
memorandum on June 26, 2018, regarding its securities analysis of Grams, along with four
supplemental memoranda dated November 28, 2018, February 27, 2019, March 18, 2019, and
July 25, 2019; (iii) participated in three in-person presentations to the SEC, during which it
answered hundreds of questions regarding the TON Blockchain, the TON Foundation, Grams
28
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 29 of 35
and related matters; and (iv) engaged in regular email and telephone discussions with the SEC
and promptly answered questions and provided additional information regarding a wide range of
topics relating to the above. These efforts were both time-consuming and expensive, but were
undertaken in a good faith attempt to engage with the SEC and receive guidance on these matters
in light of the SEC’s public statements encouraging such engagement, as described supra.
38. Below is a timeline of Telegram’s voluntary efforts:
Date Event
February 6, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vol. 1)
February 13, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vol. 2)
March 9, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vol. 3)
April 18, 2018 In-person presentation to SEC
May 14, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vol. 4)
June 26, 2018 Submission of Initial Memorandum of
Law
July 24, 2018 Call with SEC
July 31, 2018 Call with SEC
August 14, 2018 Call with SEC
September 4, 2018 Call with SEC
October 3, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vols. 5 & 6)
October 11, 2018 Call with SEC
November 13, 2018 Voluntary production of documents
(Vol. 7)
29
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November 14, 2018 Call with SEC
November 20, 2018 Submission of Supplemental
Memorandum of Law
December 13, 2018 Call with SEC
February 6, 2019 In-person presentation to SEC
February 27, 2019 Submission of Second Supplemental
Memorandum of Law
March 11, 2019 Call with SEC
March 12, 2019 Call with SEC
March 18, 2019 Submission of Third Supplemental
Memorandum of Law
March 25, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
May 28, 2019 Letter to SEC enclosing documents;
email response to SEC questions
June 14, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
June 15, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
June 28, 2019 Call with SEC
July 9, 2019 Email responding to SEC questions
July 18, 2019 In-person presentation to SEC, CFTC
and FinCEN
July 25, 2019 Submission of Fourth Supplemental
Memorandum of Law
September 3, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
September 9, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
September 12, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
September 27, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
September 30, 2019 Letter to SEC
30
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 31 of 35
October 1, 2019 Letter to SEC enclosing documents
October 3, 2019 Letter to SEC enclosing documents
October 4, 2019 Letter to SEC enclosing documents
October 10, 2019 Email response to SEC questions
October 11, 2019 Letter to SEC
39. Where the SEC did provide some limited feedback to Telegram regarding the
TON Blockchain, Telegram made changes in an attempt to address the SEC’s concerns. As one
example, following a February 6, 2019 presentation by Telegram to the SEC, the SEC expressed
concerns regarding the TON Foundation’s anticipated ability to purchase Grams in the open
market following launch. In response, Telegram submitted a supplemental legal memorandum
on March 18, 2019, setting forth its analysis that there should not be any concerns in this respect,
but nevertheless confirming that Telegram was willing to remove the TON Foundation’s Gram-
buying functions. Telegram also solicited the Commission’s views on a number of other issues,
including the structure and governance of the TON Foundation and the use of third-party
exchanges where the TON Foundation might sell Grams, among others. The SEC never
provided any guidance in response to these specific requests.
40. On October 11, 2019, the SEC initiated this enforcement action and filed an
“Emergency Application for an Order to Show Cause, Temporary Restraining Order, and Order
Granting Expedited Discovery and Other Relief,” which, among other things, sought to enjoin
the launch of the TON Blockchain and any sale, offer or distribution of Grams.
41. In its complaint, the SEC alleges that Telegram has been engaged in an “ongoing
illegal offering of digital-asset securities called ‘Grams’” since the Private Placement began in
early 2018. (See Compl. at ¶ 1.) Prior to the filing, the SEC never asked Telegram whether it
31
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would agree to seek to delay the launch of the TON Blockchain and never stated that it would
seek injunctive relief to stop the launch.
42. The SEC’s actions are in direct contradiction to its public statements inviting
developers of digital assets to engage with the SEC to work out securities issues in this new area
of the law.
FIRST DEFENSE
CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATION –
VOID FOR VAGUENESS/LACK OF NOTICE
43. Telegram repeats each of its allegations set forth above.
44. The Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution requires that “laws be
crafted with sufficient clarity to ‘give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable
opportunity to know what is prohibited’ and to ‘provide explicit standards for those who apply
them.’” Gen. Media Commc’ns, Inc v. Cohen, 131 F.3d 273, 286 (2d Cir. 1997) (citation
omitted). As the Supreme Court has put it: “Vague laws may trap the innocent by not providing
fair warning” and thus “if arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement is to be prevented, laws must
provide explicit standards for those who apply them.” Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside,
Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U.S. 489, 498 (1982) (citation omitted).
45. Accordingly, a statute is unconstitutionally vague if either (1) it does not provide
sufficient notice to those who are governed by it, or (2) it does not adequately cabin the
discretion of those who apply it. See Farid v. Ellen, 593 F.3d 233, 243 (2d Cir. 2010). These
considerations are especially important for statutes, such as Section 5 of the Securities Act of
1933, that purport to impose strict liability, see Hoffman Estates, 455 U.S. at 499, or threaten
civil penalties, see also Fox Television Stations, Inc., 567 U.S. at 255 (“[T]he Government’s
assurance it will elect not do [levy future penalties] is insufficient to remedy the constitutional
violation.”).
32
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 33 of 35
46. As applied to Telegram’s Private Placement and any future offers, sales or
distributions of Grams, the definition of “investment contract” is unconstitutionally vague
because it did not provide sufficient notice to Telegram and because it did not adequately cabin
the SEC’s discretion to apply it.
47. Even if the SEC’s position that Grams should be regulated as securities were
reasonable (and it is not), “announcing it for the first time in the context of [an] adjudication
deprives [Telegram] of fair notice.” Fabi Constr. Co. v. Sec’y of Labor, 508 F.3d 1077, 1088
(D.C. Cir. 2007); see also Martin v. Occupational Safety & Health Rev. Comm’n, 499 U.S. 144,
158 (1991) (noting that “the decision to use a citation as the initial means for announcing a
particular interpretation may bear on the adequacy of notice to regulated parties”).
48. Before this action, including during its more than 18 months of communications
with Telegram, the SEC never stated that it believed Telegram to have been engaged in an
“ongoing violation” of the federal securities laws. It also never asked Telegram whether it was
willing to delay its launch of the TON Blockchain (despite Telegram’s repeatedly expressed
willingness to address any concerns identified), and never informed Telegram that it would seek
injunctive relief to stop the launch.
49. For these reasons, “after a good-faith review of ‘the regulations and other public
statements issued by the [SEC],’” Telegram acting in good faith would not have been able “to
identify, with ascertainable certainty, the standards with which the agency expects parties to
conform.” Fabi Const. Co., 508 F.3d at 1089 (citation omitted).
33
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 34 of 35
SECOND DEFENSE
EXEMPT PRIVATE PLACEMENT
50. Telegram repeats each of the allegations set forth above.
51. Under Rule 506(c) of Regulation D, Telegram’s Private Placement pursuant to the
purchase agreements is exempt from the registration requirement of Section 5. See 17 C.F.R.
§ 230.506(c). Telegram has complied with all requirements of Regulation D.
52. Regulation S provides that offers and sales of securities that occur outside of the
United States are exempt from the registration requirements of Section 5 of the Securities Act of
1933. Telegram has complied with all requirements of Regulation S.
THIRD DEFENSE
LACK OF EXTRATERRITORIAL AUTHORITY
53. Telegram repeats each of the allegations set forth above.
54. Telegram’s purchase agreements with foreign purchasers are not domestic
transactions.
55. Accordingly, the SEC lacks extraterritorial authority over any of the transactions
between Telegram and foreign purchasers.
FOURTH DEFENSE
JURISDICTION
56. Telegram repeats each of the allegations set forth above.
57. The SEC’s claims are barred because Defendants are not subject to general or
specific jurisdiction in this Court.
FIFTH DEFENSE
RESERVATION OF RIGHTS
58. Telegram presently has insufficient knowledge or information upon which to form
a belief as to whether there may be other, as yet unstated, defenses available to Telegram, and
34
Case 1:19-cv-09439-PKC Document 37 Filed 11/12/19 Page 35 of 35
therefore expressly (1) reserves the right to amend or supplement its Answer, defenses and all
other pleadings, and (2) reserves the right to assert any and all additional defenses under any
applicable law in the event that discovery indicates such defenses would be appropriate.
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
59. WHEREFORE, Telegram respectfully requests that the Court (1) dismiss
Plaintiffs’ claims against Telegram in their entirety and with prejudice; and (2) grant such other
and further relief as it may deem just and proper.
Dated: New York, New York
November 12, 2019
/s/ Scott D. Musoff
George A. Zimmerman
Scott D. Musoff
Christopher P. Malloy
Alexander C. Drylewski
SKADDEN, ARPS, SLATE,
MEAGHER & FLOM LLP
Four Times Square
New York, New York 10036
Phone: (212) 735-3000
george.zimmerman@skadden.com
scott.musoff@skadden.com
christopher.malloy@skadden.com
alexander.drylewski@skadden.com
Attorneys for Defendants
35