Regulatory Compliance & Growth in the U.S.A & Abroad
Presented By:
DARA U.S & DARA International
Blockchain Legal Institute Foundation
Isaac Manopla is a Strategic Partnerships Manager at TRM Labs and leads the Chainabuse initiative, the world’s largest crypto scam reporting platform used by law enforcement globally. He has extensive experience in blockchain analytics, crypto investigations, and digital forensics, and previously led risk and payment operations teams at Bitpanda. Isaac holds a degree in Business Administration (Accounting & Finance) and is a certified TRM Investigator and Advanced Crypto Investigator.
Chainabuse as TRM Labs’ public, crowdsourced platform for reporting and tracking crypto scams, phishing sites, and fraudulent services.
He will explain how victim and investigator reports are centralized, enriched with blockchain intelligence, and made searchable so that law enforcement, and industry can quickly spot patterns, link related cases, and prevent repeat victimization.
Isaac will also highlight how Chainabuse supports investigations in practice by turning individual reports into actionable intelligence that accelerates case building and cross-agency collaboration.
The California and Louisiana bills you mentioned are part of a larger “Second Wave” of state AI laws. Here is who else is moving:
The most significant hurdle to a unified federal stablecoin framework — the “Yield Issue” — has reached a potential compromise.
The SEC’s updated Regulation S-P creates new, stringent requirements for Registered Investment Advisers (RIAs) that overlap with state consumer protection mandates.
On May 8, Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook will deliver remarks “Perspectives on Tokenization and Implications for the Financial System” at the Central Bank of West African States Conference on Digital Assets.
Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee Ranking Member Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and Senate Committee on Finance Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-OR) sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino requesting information about a reported loan from Tether to a trust benefiting Secretary Lutnick’s four children. (Letter to Commerce) (Letter to Tether)
On April 29, the House Financial Services Task Force on Monetary Policy, Treasury Market Resilience, and Economic Prosperity Subcommittee hearing on “Examining Derivatives’ Role in the Treasury Market.”
On April 22, 2026, the House Financial Services and House Energy and Commerce Committees announced two landmark data privacy bills, the GUARD Financial Data Act and the SECURE Data Act. Together, these bills represent a joint effort between the two committees to create a national standard on data privacy.
The bills would require technology companies and financial institutions to limit the collection of consumer data and obtain explicit opt-in consent when handling sensitive information. The legislation would also grant consumers the right to request deletion of their data, among other protections. You can read a one-pager about the bills here.
The developments discussed today can directly increase the responsibilities, risks, and opportunities for each State Attorney General (AG) offices, especially in areas like consumer protection, securities enforcement, retirement oversight, and crypto regulation.
Consumer Protection — Major increase in crypto complaints
Financial Litigation — Growth in digital asset fraud cases
Regulatory Drafting — New state crypto and retirement rules
Multi-State Actions — Likely rise in coordinated lawsuits
Technology Expertise — Need for blockchain forensic capability
Federal Coordination — More joint enforcement with DOJ, Treasury, CFTC
These developments create five major legal risk zones:
1️⃣ Stablecoin insolvency cases
2️⃣ Crypto retirement losses
3️⃣ Federal preemption disputes
4️⃣ Tax fraud investigations
5️⃣ Digital asset consumer scams
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