TLDR
- David Woodcock named as new SEC enforcement director, starting May 4
- He replaces Margaret Ryan, who resigned in March over reported tensions on crypto cases
- Senators are questioning whether Ryan faced pressure to drop fraud cases tied to Trump allies
- The SEC dropped cases against Justin Sun, Coinbase, Kraken, and Binance under the Trump administration
- The SEC’s 2025 report called Biden-era crypto enforcement a “misinterpretation of federal securities laws”
The SEC has named David Woodcock as its new director of enforcement, effective May 4. He replaces Margaret Ryan, who resigned in March after reported clashes with SEC leadership over crypto-related cases.
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 is currently a partner at Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher, where he chairs the Securities Enforcement Practice Group. He previously served as director of the SEC’s Fort Worth office from 2011 to 2015.
Before joining Gibson Dunn in 2023, Woodcock spent over a decade as an adjunct professor at Texas A&M University. He also worked as assistant general counsel at ExxonMobil and as a partner at Jones Day focusing on securities litigation.
Woodcock does not have a direct background in crypto enforcement. However, he co-authored a 2017 commentary on the SEC’s early actions on initial coin offerings.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins praised the appointment, saying the agency is “restoring Congressional intent by prioritizing cases that provide meaningful investor protection.” Woodcock said he planned to “execute the Chairman’s vision.”
Ryan’s departure has drawn scrutiny from lawmakers. Reuters reported she wanted to pursue fraud charges against people in Trump’s inner circle, but that Atkins and other top Republicans at the commission resisted.
Senators Demand Answers
Two senators have formally asked Atkins to explain whether Ryan faced pressure from SEC leadership. Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal wrote on March 30 that the SEC may have shown “preferential treatment for financial partners of President Trump.”
Blumenthal called it a “pay-to-play enforcement regime” and requested records and communications be sent to him by next week.
The controversy centers largely on Justin Sun, founder of the Tron blockchain. Under President Biden, the SEC charged Sun and affiliated companies with conducting unregistered securities offerings tied to the TRX and BTT tokens.
Regulators also accused Sun of artificially inflating TRX’s price through wash trading and paying celebrities including Lindsay Lohan and Jake Paul to promote tokens without proper disclosure.
SEC Drops Multiple Crypto Cases
Under the Trump administration, the SEC dropped its case against Sun in March, though the affiliated company Rainberry was required to pay a $10 million civil penalty.
Sun has publicly supported Trump and invested in Trump-linked crypto ventures, including World Liberty Financial and the $TRUMP memecoin. World Liberty Financial has also invested in Tron.
The SEC also dropped cases against Coinbase and Kraken, which had been accused of failing to register properly. In May, the agency dismissed its case against Binance, which had been accused of misrepresenting its trading controls.
On Tuesday, the SEC released its 2025 enforcement report. It said past enforcement actions under the Biden administration “produced no investor benefit or protection” and called them a “misinterpretation of the federal securities laws.”
The report identified seven crypto registration-related enforcement cases and six related to broker-dealer definitions in the current fiscal year.







