tradingkey.logo

Coinbase, James Harper warn that unfettered IRS access to blockchain records risks “real-time” surveillance of user activity

Cryptopolitan30 de jun de 2025 19:40

The US Supreme Court on June 30, 2025, declined without comment to review Harper v. Faulkender, ending James Harper’s challenge to an IRS “John Doe” summons that compelled Coinbase to hand over transaction records for more than 14,000 users.

The case, Harper v. Faulkender, centers on Coinbase account holder James Harper’s challenge to a 1976 Supreme Court ruling, United States v. Miller, which holds that people lack a reasonable expectation of privacy in financial records held by third parties.

In 2016, the IRS issued a John Doe summons to Coinbase, seeking financial data tied to potential tax underreporting on cryptocurrency gains. Harper says he correctly reported and paid taxes on his crypto profits, but sued, arguing the data seizure violated his Fourth Amendment rights.

Lower courts concurred with the IRS, applying the third-party doctrine from United States v. Miller (1976), which holds that customers lack privacy rights in records held by intermediaries like banks or, in this case, crypto exchanges.

The Supreme Court’s refusal means special rules for crypto

By refusing to hear the appeal, the Supreme Court leaves the First Circuit’s ruling intact. For now, Americans using crypto exchanges have no Fourth Amendment protection over transaction logs held by third parties.

Privacy advocates hoped this case would extend the narrow Carpenter v. United States (2018) exception, which required warrants to access historical cell-site data, to financial platforms.

But the Court’s silence when refusing review signals no new legal guardrails will emerge for now. This also means crypto platforms and other digital services cannot refuse requests for user data from the IRS and other related federal agencies.

Harper’s lawsuit claimed the ruling strips “millions of Americans” of meaningful privacy over digital financial data. Coinbase, backing Harper via an amicus brief filed in April, warned that the IRS dragnet allows reconstruction and future tracking of user activity—“a real‑time monitor” of every transaction.

Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal emphasized that without limits, Fourth Amendment protections over bank accounts, emails, and phone records could evaporate—and that digital platforms should receive no less privacy protection than physical mail.

The Trump administration urged the Court to reject the appeal, arguing Harper “lacks any reasonable expectation of privacy in Coinbase’s records.” They maintain that users voluntarily share data with platforms, forfeiting Fourth Amendment protection.

Other cases are challenging subpoenas to access digital data

X (formerly Twitter), now under Elon Musk, filed its own amicus brief in April, warning that broad, suspicionless subpoenas pose a threat not just to financial platforms but social media too.

X’s filing stated that the government’s ability to snoop on private accounts without warrants endangers free expression and data privacy on all digital platforms.

With no Supreme Court intervention, the First Circuit’s interpretation will continue to influence similar cases across the country, granting the IRS the power to subpoena digital financial data stored by custodial services.

There’s growing momentum from privacy groups and bipartisan lawmakers to update Fourth Amendment protections for digital data. So, Congress or future litigation may eventually challenge the doctrine’s place in the crypto era.

KEY Difference Wire helps crypto brands break through and dominate headlines fast

Descargo de responsabilidad: La información proporcionada en este sitio web es solo para fines educativos e informativos, y no debe considerarse como asesoramiento financiero o de inversión.

Artículos Relacionados

tradingkey.logo
tradingkey.logo
Datos intradía proporcionados por Refinitiv y sujetos a condiciones de uso. Datos históricos y actuales al final del día proporcionados por Refinitiv. Todas las cotizaciones son en hora local. Los datos de última venta en tiempo real para las cotizaciones de valores de EE.UU. reflejan las operaciones comunicadas a través del Nasdaq únicamente. Los datos intradía se retrasan al menos 15 minutos o según los requisitos de la bolsa.
* Las referencias, los análisis y las estrategias de trading son proporcionados por un proveedor externo, Trading Central, y el punto de vista se basa en la evaluación y el juicio independientes del analista, sin considerar los objetivos de inversión ni la situación financiera de los inversores.
Advertencia de Riesgo: Nuestro sitio web y aplicación móvil solo proporcionan información general sobre ciertos productos de inversión. Finsights no proporciona, y la provisión de dicha información no debe interpretarse como que Finsights proporciona, asesoramiento financiero o recomendación para cualquier producto de inversión.
Los productos de inversión están sujetos a riesgos de inversión significativos, incluida la posible pérdida del monto principal invertido y pueden no ser adecuados para todos. El rendimiento pasado de los productos de inversión no es indicativo de su rendimiento futuro.
Finsights puede permitir que anunciantes o afiliados de terceros coloquen o entreguen anuncios en nuestro sitio web o aplicación móvil o en cualquier parte de los mismos y puede ser compensado por ellos en función de su interacción con los anuncios.
© Derechos de autor: FINSIGHTS MEDIA PTE. LTD. Todos los derechos reservados.
KeyAI