Law Enforcement Concerns Take Centre Stage US administration officials are expected to sit down with law enforcement groups at the White House on Wednesday to discuss the Digital Asset Market
Law Enforcement Concerns Take Centre Stage
US administration officials are expected to sit down with law enforcement groups at the White House on Wednesday to discuss the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, according to CoinTelegraph. The talks centre on concerns that certain provisions in the bill could hamper efforts to combat illicit finance.
Law enforcement groups have argued that the legislation does not do enough to prevent illicit financial transactions through digital assets and would make it harder to catch bad actors. The meeting signals that those objections have reached a level of urgency requiring direct engagement with the administration.
A Bill Gaining Ground in Congress
The Clarity Act, short for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, passed the House of Representatives last year but has faced setbacks in the Senate Banking Committee as banks and stablecoin companies have squared off over the question of how and when rewards can be paid on stablecoin balances.
After a period of partisan friction, the Senate Banking Committee secured a 15-9 bipartisan approval for the bill, advancing it to the next steps, though many Democrats are reserving their position until key issues, including law enforcement concerns and an ethics provision, can be resolved.
White House digital assets adviser Patrick Witt has said the administration is targeting July 4 for House passage of the Clarity Act, with the Senate Banking Committee markup planned and four working Senate weeks in June earmarked for floor passage.
Among the remaining sticking points are illicit financial protections in the decentralised finance space and a request from Democrats that senior government officials be barred from profiting from the crypto sector. Wednesday's White House meeting with law enforcement groups suggests those DeFi-related concerns remain unresolved, even as the bill edges closer to a full Senate vote.
Cody Carbone, who heads the Digital Chamber, told reporters that striking a deal on the ethics provision is likely needed to secure an eventual Senate vote above the 60-vote threshold required, and that the vote likely needs to happen by August.
Sources:CNBC: Crypto industry scores win as Clarity Act clears Senate committeeCoinDesk: Clarity Act clears US Senate committeeCoinDesk: White House targets July 4 for Clarity Act passage