A Coinbase shareholder has filed a derivative lawsuit against CEO Brian Armstrong and several members of the company’s board and executive team, alleging they misled investors about risks tied to custody practices, securities listings, and anti-money laundering controls.
The complaint, filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey, was brought by shareholder Kevin Meehan on behalf of Coinbase itself. The suit names Armstrong, co-founder Fred Ehrsam, and multiple directors and executives as defendants.
The lawsuit alleges that between April 2021 and June 2023, Coinbase leadership breached fiduciary duties and issued “materially false and misleading statements” that exposed the company to regulatory scrutiny and legal liabilities.
Consensys Senior Counsel Bill Hughes noted in a post on X that because the case is structured as a shareholder derivative action, any monetary recovery would go to Coinbase itself rather than directly to shareholders.
Custody and property issues
One of the central allegations concerns how Coinbase described the safety of customer assets held on its platform.
According to the complaint, Coinbase told users that assets held in hosted wallets were “custodial assets held by Coinbase for your benefit,” language included in the company’s Retail User Agreement. However, the lawsuit claims the company failed to disclose that those assets could be treated as property of the company’s bankruptcy estate if the exchange entered insolvency, potentially leaving retail customers as general unsecured creditors.
The complaint also alleges that Coinbase commingled retail customer assets while maintaining segregated custody structures for institutional clients.
Securities listings and AML controls
The lawsuit further claims that Coinbase repeatedly stated that its asset-review process “keeps securities off Coinbase’s platform,” despite indicators that some listed tokens carried securities risk.
The allegations reference the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s June 2023 enforcement action accusing Coinbase of operating as an unregistered securities exchange and listing unregistered securities.
The Block reached out to Coinbase for comment.
The SEC’s complaint identified several tokens traded on Coinbase that it alleged were securities, including Solana and Cardano. However, the case was ultimately dismissed in 2025 as the agency shifted its approach to crypto under new leadership, with SEC Chair Paul Atkins saying that “most crypto tokens trading today are not themselves securities.”
Plaintiffs also cite Coinbase’s January 2023 settlement with the New York State Department of Financial Services, which required the company to pay a $50 million penalty and commit another $50 million toward strengthening its compliance program after regulators found “wide-ranging and long-standing failures” in its anti-money laundering controls.
Insider sales and damages
The complaint also alleges that several executives sold company stock while in possession of nonpublic information during the period surrounding Coinbase’s 2021 direct listing.
The suit seeks damages for Coinbase tied to regulatory penalties, legal costs, and reputational harm, as well as restitution of compensation and stock-sale proceeds from certain executives.
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