Crypto commentator Stellar Rippler has highlighted the recently unveiled Jeffrey Epstein emails as material that could reshape perceptions surrounding the legal case involving XRP.
The documents, dated 2018, are presented as offering new context about early interactions involving Gary Gensler, who would later become Chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, years before the SEC initiated its enforcement action against Ripple.
According to Stellar Rippler, the emails show Jeffrey Epstein reaching out to former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers in a message marked “DO NOT SHARE OR QUOTE.” In the correspondence, Epstein wrote that Gary Gensler was “coming earlier” and “wants to talk digital currencies.”
The statement suggests that Gensler was already seeking engagement on digital currency topics at the time, despite not holding a senior regulatory position overseeing crypto markets.
Summers responded by stating that he knew Gensler from their time working together at the U.S. Treasury in the 1990s. He described Gensler as “pretty smart” and noted that he had been “very involved with Hillary campaign and angling for jobs.”
Summers also referenced differing views on Gensler’s tenure as Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, indicating that his leadership there had not been universally supported.
The tweet further notes that in 2018, Gary Gensler joined MIT’s Media Lab as a Senior Advisor to the Director, Joi Ito. According to Stellar Rippler, this appointment occurred despite Gensler having no formal background in blockchain technology at the time. His role involved advising the lab on its digital currency initiatives, placing him in an influential academic position focused on emerging financial technologies.
This detail is emphasized as significant because it situates Gensler within elite institutional networks discussing digital assets well before he later assumed the role of SEC Chair, a position from which he would oversee and influence U.S. crypto regulation.
Stellar Rippler argues that the email exchange “says the quiet part out loud,” suggesting that discussions about digital currencies and regulatory positioning were taking place privately among powerful figures years in advance.
The tweet also references comments from Austin Hill, who reportedly acknowledged that Ripple and Stellar were viewed as threats to an existing financial ecosystem, one that prioritizes control over open innovation.
Within this context, the commentator connects these earlier relationships and perspectives to subsequent regulatory actions, including the XRP lawsuit.
The tweet does not claim the emails constitute direct legal evidence related to the XRP case. Instead, Stellar Rippler presents them as contextual material that adds depth to the timeline surrounding crypto regulation in the United States and the part individuals who would later hold significant regulatory authority play.
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