The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has officially withdrawn its lawsuit against prominent crypto influencer and Token Metrics CEO Ian Balina. The case, originally filed in 2022, accused Balina of orchestrating an unregistered securities offering tied to the 2018 Sparkster (SPRK) initial coin offering . But as of May 1, both parties filed a joint stipulation in a Texas federal court, with the SEC stating that it “believes the dismissal of this case is appropriate.” End to a Long-Running Balina Case The agency didn’t offer a specific explanation for its sudden change of heart. However, it noted the involvement of its Crypto Task Force and emphasized that the dismissal shouldn’t be interpreted as a precedent or reflection of its stance in other ongoing or future cases. For observers of regulatory trends, the timing of the decision speaks volumes. Balina, who built his reputation during the ICO boom, said back in March that the SEC had hinted at backing off. He attributed the shift to the agency’s new leadership under President Donald Trump, who appointed former crypto lobbyist Paul Atkins as SEC Chair—a move that many in the industry view as a green light for crypto innovation. Shifting Sands Under a New Administration The Balina case was once emblematic of the SEC’s broader crackdown on ICO-era excesses . The agency alleged that Balina had pooled investor funds using Telegram and distributed SPRK tokens without proper registration. Their argument even leaned on Ethereum’s validator node geography to assert U.S. jurisdiction. In May 2024, a court agreed with the SEC’s assessment that SPRK qualified as a security. But now, with a markedly more crypto-friendly administration in power, the agency appears to be walking back its aggressive stance. The stipulation to dismiss also mentioned conserving court resources and came with a clear note: neither side would bear costs or fees. This dismissal joins a growing list of scrapped enforcement actions in recent weeks. The SEC has recently closed cases or abandoned investigations involving major industry players including Coinbase, Ripple, Kraken, OpenSea, and PayPal’s PYUSD stablecoin initiative . The post SEC Quietly Drops Case Against Crypto Influencer Ian Balina appeared first on TheCoinrise.com .