US-based cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has filed an amicus brief in the country’s Supreme Court in support of a taxpayer fighting the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) gaining access to his data from a digital asset platform.
In an April 30 filing in the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS), lawyers for Coinbase
“This case directly affects Coinbase’s interest in protecting the privacy rights of its users and in the correct application of this Court’s doctrine on constitutional guarantees against warrantless government demands for third-party service providers to surrender users’ personal information,” the brief reads.
“If the First Circuit’s ruling is allowed to stand, the Fourth Amendment will give no protection to millions of law-abiding Americans who routinely share intimate personal information with the third parties that ubiquitously store, transmit, or provide services based on that data,” it added.
An amicus brief is a filing in support of a plaintiff by an entity that is not directly involved. The case before the court has the potential to
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“We believe in tax compliance, but this goes far beyond a narrow and tailored request and far beyond crypto,”
It’s unclear whether the court will take up the case. SCOTUS typically releases its opinions to the public in June. Since first being filed in 2020, many industry advocates have filed similar amicus briefs in support of Harper, including social media company X and the DeFi Education Fund.
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