Key Takeaways
- SEC announces David Woodcock as enforcement division chief, beginning May 4
- Margaret Ryan stepped down in March following reported disputes over cryptocurrency investigations
- Congressional lawmakers investigating potential political influence on enforcement decisions involving Trump-connected individuals
- High-profile cryptocurrency cases against Justin Sun, Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance were withdrawn under current administration
- SEC’s latest annual enforcement report criticized previous administration’s crypto regulatory approach as legally flawed
The Securities and Exchange Commission has announced David Woodcock will take over as enforcement division director on May 4. His appointment follows Margaret Ryan’s resignation in March, which came amid reported disagreements with commission leadership regarding cryptocurrency enforcement actions.
TODAY: SEC Appoints David Woodcock as Director of the Division of Enforcement
Read the full press release: https://t.co/5MVlK258UZ pic.twitter.com/ORZiOO52lO
— U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (@SECGov) April 8, 2026
Woodcock currently serves as a partner at Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher, leading the firm’s Securities Enforcement Practice Group. His SEC experience includes directing the agency’s Fort Worth regional office between 2011 and 2015.
Prior to his 2023 move to Gibson Dunn, Woodcock held positions as adjunct professor at Texas A&M University for more than ten years. His professional resume also includes roles as assistant general counsel at ExxonMobil and partner at Jones Day specializing in securities disputes.
While Woodcock lacks direct cryptocurrency enforcement experience, he contributed to a 2017 analysis examining the SEC’s initial regulatory response to initial coin offerings.
SEC Chairman Paul Atkins endorsed the selection, stating the commission is “restoring Congressional intent by prioritizing cases that provide meaningful investor protection.” Woodcock expressed his commitment to “execute the Chairman’s vision.”
Ryan’s resignation has triggered congressional oversight efforts. According to Reuters, she advocated for pursuing fraud allegations against individuals within Trump’s inner circle, but faced resistance from Atkins and Republican commissioners.
Congressional Investigation Intensifies
Two U.S. senators have formally requested Atkins clarify whether Ryan encountered political pressure from commission leadership. In a March 30 letter, Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal suggested the SEC may have granted “preferential treatment for financial partners of President Trump.”
Blumenthal characterized the situation as a “pay-to-play enforcement regime” and demanded relevant documentation and correspondence be submitted by the following week.
The dispute primarily involves Justin Sun, creator of the Tron blockchain network. During the Biden presidency, the SEC filed charges against Sun and related entities for conducting unregistered securities sales involving TRX and BTT tokens.
The enforcement action also alleged Sun manipulated TRX prices through wash trading schemes and compensated influencers like Lindsay Lohan and Jake Paul to promote tokens without required disclosures.
Multiple Cryptocurrency Investigations Withdrawn
Following the change in administration, the SEC dismissed charges against Sun in March, although the affiliated entity Rainberry agreed to a $10 million civil settlement.
Sun has openly backed Trump and participated in Trump-associated cryptocurrency projects, including World Liberty Financial and the $TRUMP memecoin. World Liberty Financial has reciprocally invested in Tron.
The agency similarly withdrew enforcement actions against Coinbase and Kraken, both previously accused of registration violations. In May, the commission terminated its case against Binance, which faced allegations of misrepresenting trading oversight mechanisms.
On Tuesday, the SEC published its 2025 enforcement summary. The document asserted that previous enforcement initiatives under the Biden administration “produced no investor benefit or protection” and represented a “misinterpretation of the federal securities laws.”
The summary documented seven cryptocurrency registration enforcement matters and six cases related to broker-dealer classification standards in the current fiscal period.
