Quant Stamp
Quant Stamp
Quant Stamp
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
CHASE WILLIAMS, individually and on behalf of
all others similarly situated,
Plaintiff,
No. ______________
v.
JURY DEMANDED
QUANTSTAMP, INC., RICHARD MA, and
STEVEN STEWART,
Defendants.
CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT
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Plaintiff Chase Williams, individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated, brings
this action against Defendants Quantstamp, Inc. (“Quantstamp”), Richard Ma, and Steven Stewart
(the “Individual Defendants”). Plaintiff’s allegations are based upon personal knowledge as to
himself and his own acts, and upon information and belief as to all other matters based on the
investigation conducted by and through Plaintiff’s attorneys, which included, among other things,
a review of relevant whitepapers, press releases, media reports, and other publicly disclosed reports
and information about Defendants. Plaintiff believes that substantial additional evidentiary
support will exist for the allegations set forth herein, after a reasonable opportunity for discovery.
I. INTRODUCTION
1. Within the Class Period, which is from November 17, 2017 through the present
Quantstamp and the Individual Defendants Richard Ma and Steven Stewart promoted, offered, and
sold Quantstamp’s securities, called QSP tokens, throughout the United States, in violation of
2. Plaintiff, individually and on behalf of investors who purchased QSP tokens in the
United States (the “Class”) brings claims to recover the consideration paid for the QSP tokens,
3. A digital token is a type of digital asset that exists on what is called a “blockchain,”
which is essentially a decentralized digital ledger that records transactions. Various digital assets
can reside on blockchains, including cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin and Ethereum (both
discussed in greater detail below), as well as so-called “smart contracts” that operate under a set
of predetermined conditions agreed to by users. With smart contracts, the terms of the contract
are automatically carried out by the software underlying the digital tokens (which, as relevant here,
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are referred to as “ERC-20 tokens” and exist on the Ethereum blockchain) when the agreed
4. Certain of these digital tokens are classified as “utility tokens” and are associated
with particular projects. Their primary purpose is to allow the holder to use or access the associated
project. For example, one private jet company issues utility tokens to participants in its
membership program, who can then use them to charter flights on the company’s planes. A utility
5. Other tokens are more speculative, and are referred to as “security tokens,” and like
a traditional security, essentially represent one’s investment in a project. Although they take value
from the startup behind the project, they do not give the holder ownership in that startup. Rather,
investors purchase these tokens with the idea that their value will increase as the network in which
the token can be used is expanded based upon the managerial efforts of the issuer and those
developing the project. Because such “security tokens” are properly classified as securities under
federal and state law, the issuers of these tokens, including Quantstamp, were required to file
registration statements with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). Quantstamp,
however, failed to do so. By selling these unregistered tokens to investors, Quantstamp reaped
6. The scheme worked as follows: On October 9, 2017, Quantstamp announced its
presale process via a blog post, where it launched its “Proof of Caring” campaign to incentivize
the “exceptional individuals who care about the long term goals of [Quantstamp] and have been
spreading the gospel far and wide.” Ma asserted that they were “solving a very important security
problem with Ethereum smart contracts,” and that “people should know about this.” While the
Quantstamp presale had purportedly “received overwhelming demand,” in an effort to “help get
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the word out,” Ma asked fans to “[s]how the love by writing a blog post, reaching out to different
corners or the internet, reviewing our project, making a quick youtube video or podcast, reviewing
the pros and cons of our whitepaper, or by inviting people to join us on telegram and help us build
a genuine community.” Fans were asked to fill out a Google form and were advised that
Quantstamp would start adding tiers to the pre-sale process which was to continue with a deadline
of November 9, 2017. On October 12, 2017, Ma laid out what he represented were the terms of
terms the supposed utility to which QSP would be placed. The whitepaper explicitly stated that
QSP tokens were not being offered as securities, and thus omitted the disclosures that securities
laws and the SEC have long deemed essential to investor protections in initial public offerings,
including use of “plain English” to describe the offering: a required list of key risk factors; a
description of key information and incentives concerning management; an explanation of how the
proceeds from the offering would be used; and a standardized format that investors could readily
follow. Without these critical disclosures, investors in QSP tokens were thus left to fend for
8. Quantstamp then sold the QSP tokens to investors through an “initial coin offering”
(or “ICO”). Quantstamp kept 35 percent of the QSP tokens for itself and solicited online
exchanges of digital assets (known as “cryptocurrency exchanges”) to list QSP tokens on their
platforms and encourage purchases by a wide universe of investors. Although QSP was a security,
Quantstamp did not register it as a security with the SEC and did not qualify for an exemption
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9. Quantstamp did not disclose at issuance that QSP was a security. In fact, the QSP
whitepaper explicitly stated that the QSP tokens that were to be offered at the Quantstamp token
Pre-Sale and the Public Sale were “not intended to constitute securities in any jurisdiction” and
that the whitepaper was not ”intended to constitute an offer of securities or solicitation for
investment in securities in any jurisdiction.” Investors thus reasonably understood that QSP was
not subject, at the time of issuance, to U.S. securities laws. In addition, Quantstamp further
confirmed to investors at issuance that QSP was not a security by failing to file a registration
10. Quantstamp promoted, offered, and sold QSP tokens through generalized
solicitations using statements posted on the Internet and distributed throughout the United States
and the rest of the world, such that Quantstamp offered and sold the securities to Plaintiff and the
general public in the United States. Although Quantstamp described the QSP tokens as something
other than securities, they were securities. This was not clear to a reasonable investor at purchase,
however, and would not have been reasonably apparent until, at the earliest, April 3, 2019, when
the SEC released a detailed “Framework” to analyze digital assets, indicating that QSP and other
similar digital tokens are “investment contracts” and therefore securities under Section 2 of the
Securities Act. of 1933 (the “Securities Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 77b(a)(1) 1. Prior to that time, based
on statements of Quantstamp and the SEC, a reasonable investor would not have concluded that
such tokens were securities under federal and state law. But QSP was a security under the SEC
Framework. Quantstamp thus engaged in transactions that consisted of the solicitation, offer, and
1
Framework for “Investment Contract” Analysis of Digital Assets, SEC (April 3, 2019),
https://www.sec.gov/corpfin/framework-investment-contract-analysis-digital-assets#_ednref1.
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sale of securities without registering them as federal and state laws require for the protection of
investors.
11. On September 30, 2019, nearly six months after releasing its Framework, the SEC
found that another major issuer of digital tokens, Block one, which had issued a token called EOS
between June 2017 and June 2018, had likewise violated the Securities Act by selling unregistered
securities to the public. The EOS token was functionally identical to QSP—both tokens were not
described as securities to investors but are securities under the SEC’s Framework. As a result of
an SEC enforcement action, Block one was required to pay a $24 million fine. 2 The SEC’s
12. Plaintiff and the Class are entitled to recover the consideration they paid for the
QSP tokens with interest thereon at the legal rate, or the equivalent in monetary damages plus
13. In addition, numerous Class members resided, and were present at the time they
traded in QSP tokens, in the State of Texas, which provides its own “Blue Sky” protections for
investors. 3 Under these laws, investors in Texas who purchased unregistered QSP securities are
2
Press Release, SEC Orders Blockchain Company to Pay $24 Million Penalty for Unregistered
ICO (Sept. 30, 2019), https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2019-202; Block.one, Exchange
Act Release No. 10714, 2019 WL 4793292 (Sept. 30, 2019).
3
These “Blue Sky” statutes are so named because they are designed to protect investors from
“speculative schemes which have no more basis than so many feet of blue sky.” Hall v. Geiger-
Jones Co., 242 U.S. 539, 550 (1917) (internal citations omitted). Like the federal securities laws,
Texas defines “securities” to include “investment contracts,” which has been interpreted by
Texas courts at least as broadly as the standard set forth by the Supreme Court in S.E.C. v. W.J.
Howey Co., 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
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14. Accordingly, Plaintiff individually and on behalf of the Class brings claims to
recover the consideration paid for the QSP tokens, together with interest thereon, as well as
II. PARTIES
A. Plaintiff
15. Plaintiff Chase Williams is a resident of Houston Texas. Williams and members
of the Class purchased QSP, an unregistered security, from Texas during the Class Period.
B. Defendants
16. Defendant Quantstamp is a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware with
software development company that develops blockchain security solutions and is developing and
17. Defendant Richard Ma is a co-founder and the Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) of
18. Defendant Steven Stewart is the co-founder, former Chief Technology Officer
(“CTO”), and current “technical fellow” of Quantstamp. On information and belief, he resides in
Toronto, Canada.
III. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
19. Jurisdiction of this Court is founded upon 28 U.S.C. § 1331 because the Complaint
asserts claims under Sections 5, 12(a)(1), and 15 of the Securities Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 77e, 77l(a)(1),
77o. This Court further has jurisdiction over the Securities Act claims pursuant to Section 22 of
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20. This Court has jurisdiction over the statutory claims of violations under Tex. Rev.
Civ. Stat. art. 581-33 pursuant to this Court’s supplemental jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §1367(a).
21. This Court has personal jurisdiction over Defendants as a result of acts of
Defendants occurring in or aimed at the State of New York in connection with Defendants’ offer
22. Venue is proper pursuant to 15 U.S.C. § 77v(a) in that this is a district wherein one
or more defendants is found or transacts business and where the offer or sale of QSP tokens took
place. In 2019, Quantstamp representatives attended, hosted, and assisted events at the Blockchain
IV. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
A. The First Cryptocurrency: Bitcoin
transactions, control the creation of additional units, and verify the transfer of the underlying
digital assets.
24. Bitcoin was the world’s first decentralized cryptocurrency. It is also the largest and
most popular cryptocurrency, with a market capitalization of approximately $126 billion. Bitcoin
spawned a market of other cryptocurrencies that, together with Bitcoin, have a current market
capitalization of approximately $192 billion. (The term “bitcoin” can refer to both a computer
protocol and a unit of exchange. Accepted practice is to use the term “Bitcoin” to label the protocol
and software, and the term “bitcoin” to label the units of exchange.)
25. At its core, Bitcoin is a ledger that tracks the ownership and transfer of every bitcoin
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26. Blockchains act as the central technical commonality across most cryptocurrencies.
While each blockchain may be subject to different technical rules and permissions based on the
preferences of its creators, they are typically designed to achieve the similar goal of
decentralization.
encourages some people to do the work of validating transactions while allowing others to take
advantage of the network. In order to ensure successful validation, those completing the validation
are also required to solve a “Proof of Work” problem by expending computational resources which
has the effect of making the blockchain more accurate and secure. For Bitcoin, those who validate
the blockchain transactions and solve the “Proof of Work” program are rewarded with newly
28. Mining is one method by which an individual can acquire cryptocurrencies like
Bitcoin. A second and more common manner is to obtain cryptocurrencies from someone else.
29. Online cryptocurrency exchanges are one place to purchase Bitcoin and other
cryptocurrencies. These exchanges are similar to traditional exchanges in that they provide a
coinmartketcap.com, a popular website that tracks the cryptocurrency markets. As of this filing,
31. For a time, Bitcoin was the only cryptocurrency available on exchanges. As
cryptocurrencies grew in popularity, exchanges began listing other cryptocurrencies as well, and
trading volumes expanded. In early 2013, daily Bitcoin trading volumes hovered between $1
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million and $25 million. By the end of 2017, daily Bitcoin trading volumes ranged between $200
B. Ethereum
of approximately $16 billion. The Ethereum blockchain functions similarly to the Bitcoin
blockchain insofar as its miners act as the validators of the network. Miners of the Ethereum
blockchain are paid for their services in the form of newly minted ether. (The term “Ethereum”
refers to the open software platform built on top of the Ethereum blockchain, while the term “ether”
is the unit of account used to exchange value within the Ethereum “ecosystem,” i.e., the overall
33. Unlike Bitcoin’s blockchain, Ethereum was designed to enable “smart contract”
functionality. A smart contract is a program that verifies and enforces the negotiation or
34. As an example of how a smart contract works, consider a situation where two
people want to execute a hedging contract. They each put up $1,000 worth of ether. They agree
that, after a month, one of them will receive back $1,000 worth of ether at the dollar exchange rate
at that time, while the other receives the rest of the ether. The rest of the ether may or may not be
35. A smart contract enables these two people to submit the ether to a secure destination
and automatically distribute the ether at the end of the month without any third-party action. The
smart contract self-executes with instructions written on its code which get executed when the
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36. In order to enable widespread adoption and standardized protocols for smart
contracts, the Ethereum community has created certain out-of-the box smart contracts called
37. An ERC is an application standard for a smart contract. Anyone can create an ERC
and then seek support for that standard. Once an ERC is accepted by the Ethereum community, it
benefits Ethereum users because it provides for uniform transactions, reduced risk, and efficient
processes. The most widespread use of ERCs is to allow individuals to easily launch and create
C. ERC-20 Tokens
38. ERC-20 is an application standard that the creator of Ethereum, Vitalik Buterin,
first proposed in 2015. ERC-20 is a standard that allows for the creation of smart-contract tokens
39. ERC-20 tokens are built on the Ethereum blockchain, and therefore they must be
exchanged on it. Accordingly, ERC-20 tokens are functionally different than cryptocurrencies like
40. ERC-20 tokens all function similarly by design—that is, they are compliant with
the ERC-20 application standard. Some properties related to ERC-20 tokens are customizable,
such as the total supply of tokens, the token’s ticker symbol, and the token’s name. All ERC-20
tokens transactions, however, occur over the Ethereum blockchain; none of them operates over its
own blockchain.
41. ERC-20 tokens are simple and easy to deploy. Anyone with a basic understanding
of Ethereum can use the ERC-20 protocol to create her own ERC-20 tokens, which she can then
distribute and make available for purchase. Even people without any technical expertise can have
their own ERC-20 token created for them, which can then be marketed to investors.
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D. The Advent Of The “ICO”
42. Between 2014 and 2016, Bitcoin’s price fluctuated between $200 and $800. During
this same time frame, ether’s price fluctuated between roughly $1 and $10.
43. By the end of 2016, interest in cryptocurrencies began to accelerate, with prices
growing at a rate historically unprecedented for any asset class. Over the course of 2017 alone,
growth was even more startling. On January 1, 2017, Ethereum was trading at approximately $8
per ether. Approximately one year later, it was trading at over $1,400 per ether—a return of
entrepreneurs sought to raise funds through initial coin offerings, or ICOs, including ICOs for
newly created ERC-20 tokens, such as the QSP tokens. Many of these issuers improperly chose
not to register their securities offerings with the SEC in order to save money and not “open their
books” to the SEC, even though investors thereby were denied access to critical information they
would have received from an SEC-registered offering. As a result investors, including investors
in QSP, were denied access to important information before making their investment decision.
45. In the case of QSP, the initial offering occurred over a three day period with 650
million (or 65 percent of the total supply) of QSP tokens sold, raising approximately $31 million.
Investors would explore the various cryptocurrency exchanges and social media sites that
published active and upcoming ICOs. Many of these postings encouraged trading in QSP for
profit. As one poster explained in a October 24, 2017 post regarding “how can token value
appreciate” with QSP, “the more usage the protocol has, the more valuable QSP tokens should be”
– ultimately recommending that she “like[d] its long term potential.” As another poster put it,
“[t]here is a very large potential for Richard [Ma] to lead the product to a 9 or 10 figure value in a
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very short time frame…. The ICO valuation offers outstanding value given the massive and
46. Over 2017 and 2018, nearly $20 billion was raised through ICOs, none of which
was registered with the SEC. Of the approximately 800 ICOs launched between 2017 and 2018,
47. Like most ICOs, ERC-20 ICOs were typically announced and promoted through
describing the project and terms of the ICO. These whitepapers advertised the sale of tokens or
coins through the ICO. They typically advertised the creation of a “new blockchain architecture.”
48. The whitepapers typically contained vastly less information than a registration
statement filed with the SEC would have included. For example, whitepapers often did not include
a “plain English” description of the offering; a required list of key risk factors; a description of
important information and incentives concerning management; an explanation of how the proceeds
from the offering would be used; and a standardized format that investors could readily follow.
49. When tokens were sold through an ERC-20 ICO, the issuer usually asserted that
such tokens entitled their holders to certain rights related to a venture underlying the ICO, such as
the right to use certain services provided by the issuer. In almost all cases, these tokens could also
be traded, thereby giving investors a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the
entrepreneurial or managerial efforts of others (that is, the people operating the issuer whose efforts
50. These tokens were frequently listed on cryptocurrency exchanges, where they were
bought and sold using other cryptocurrencies (such as Bitcoin or Ethereum) or traditional
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E. Quantstamp Solicited And Sold The QSP Token Through Both An ICO And
Through Subsequent Sales On Cryptocurrency Exchanges
51. Prior to its November 2017 ICO, Quantstamp published a whitepaper. Casting the
Quantstamp protocol as a solution to the “smart contract security problem,” the whitepaper
described the Quantstamp protocol as “the first smart contract security-auditing protocol.” The
whitepaper asserted that Quantstamp would create a “scalable cost-effective system to audit all
smart contracts on the Ethereum network” and that over time they expected “every Ethereum smart
contract to use the Quantstamp protocol to perform a security audit because security is essential.”
The whitepaper touted its team of software testing experts who “collectively have over 500 Google
Scholar citations.”
52. QSP was launched through use of the ERC-20 protocol. At launch, 1 billion
the remaining 65 percent of the tokens during QSP’s ICO, which Quantstamp organized and ran.
Over its three day ICO, from November 17 to November 19, 2017, Quantstamp raised
For example, cryptocurrency exchange Huobi touted that it would be the first exchange to list QSP:
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sort and is not intended to constitute an offer of securities in any jurisdiction or a solicitation for
investment in securities” amongst other things. Further, Quantstamp failed to register its offering
of QSP with the SEC, thus further confirming to investors that QSP was not a security.
58. Misleadingly, Quantstamp also promoted itself as being similar to Ethereum and
Bitcoin, which are not securities nor required to be registered with the SEC. Quantstamp’s stated
“goal is to create a permissionless and decentralized network much like Ethereum and Bitcoin.”
And Quantstamp’s co-founder Steven Stewart has expressly compared QSP tokens to those
cryptocurrencies: “Ether is used for fueling token transfers and other state changes. We are
committed to exclusively using QSP to fuel our protocol.” Indeed, in the QSP whitepaper,
Quantstamp represented to investors that “we are extending Ethereum with technology designed
to ensure the security of smart contracts.” Indeed, the whitepaper claimed Quantstamp protocol
59. At the time of the QSP ICO, Quantstamp took advantage of the market’s lack of
understanding and awareness concerning how cryptocurrencies worked. In the face of promises
that the Quantstamp protocol would one day “become part of the Ethereum protocol” able to “audit
all smart contract projects on Ethereum,” and considering the new technology at issue and
Quantstamp’s other statements, many individuals were understandably unaware that QSP tokens
had fundamentally different features than other cryptocurrencies, which the SEC has determined
are not securities. Moreover, the Quantstamp whitepaper was ambiguous about how it would use
the proceeds of the QSP ICO, stating only that “all proceeds received by Quantstamp may be spent
disclaimer to its publicly available whitepaper, stating that the QSP tokens “previously offered in
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2017 at the Quantstamp Token Pre-Sale and the Public Sale . . . are not intended to constitute
securities in any jurisdiction” and reiterated that the whitepaper “does not constitute a prospectus
or offer document of any sort and is not intended to constitute an offer of securities or a solicitation
61. In its whitepaper, Quantstamp also sought to emphasize the utility rather than
security token characteristics of QSP tokens. Quantstamp stated that “Quantstamp tokens are sold
as a functional good” and that “[a]s of the date of publication of this paper, the Tokens have no
known potential uses outside of the Quantstamp ecosystem and are not permitted to be sold or
otherwise traded on third-party exchanges.” Of course, Quantstamp did list QSP tokens on third
party exchanges within days after its ICO, and then repeated its’ instruction that QSP tokens were
62. Prior to April 3, 2019, when the SEC released its Framework, it was therefore
unclear to a reasonable investor that QSP was a security. For example, in March 2018, investors
sought clarification from Quantstamp on reddit to “help us investors to get this more clear”
regarding how the SEC might impact QSP tokens. Quantstamp responded evasively, saying that
“Quantstamp has retained top legal counsel from the beginning and conservatively followed and
will continue to follow the regulatory guidance at every step” without further elaboration.
63. On June 14, 2018, the Director of the Corporation Finance Division, William H.
Hinman, explained that “the ICOs I am seeing, strictly speaking, the token—or coin or whatever
the digital information packet is called—all by itself is not a security.” On May 2, 2018,
Commissioner Hester Peirce similarly expressed her view that not “all ICOs must be deemed
securities offerings.” Commissioner Peirce identified numerous open questions that issuers like
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Quantstamp emphasized when arguing ERC-20 tokens are not securities, such as the utility of the
64. Other thought leaders in the space, such as the lawfully registered broker-dealer
Coinbase, opined in late 2016 that “we have considered the question of whether issuance of a
Blockchain Token prior to the existence of a system would constitute a security. We have not
found conclusive law on the subject, but believe that the better view is that a non-security
Blockchain Token does not become a security merely because the system as to which it has rights
65. In sum, before the SEC issued its Framework on April 3, 2019, a reasonable
investor would not have concluded that ERC-20 tokens like the QSP token were generally
securities subject to the securities laws. On the contrary, they were confronted with representations
both from token issuers and from cryptocurrency discussions that led them reasonably to believe
G. The QSP Tokens Are Securities
66. QSP tokens are securities because they constituted an investment of money in a
common enterprise with a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the efforts of others.
At issuance, as described above, it was not clear that the QSP tokens were securities as defined
under federal and state securities laws. Quantstamp acted as if the QSP tokens were not securities,
for example, by not ensuring that a registration statement was filed with the SEC, which would
have provided important disclosures to investors of the risks inherent in these investments,
and Ethereum in its whitepaper. The distinction between Bitcoin and Ethereum, on the one hand,
and digital tokens, such as QSP, on the other, was material to investors, including in evaluating
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whether QSP is a security. When the Bitcoin and Ethereum systems were created, only a tiny
fraction of the underlying cryptocurrency units was in existence. As a result, increases in bitcoin
and ether could occur at a fixed rate over time, such as from mining. The growth of Bitcoin and
Ethereum thus occurs through a decentralized process as numerous users engage in mining and
68. By contrast, Quantstamp issued a substantial portion of the total stock of QSP
tokens at issuance, at very little economic cost to Quantstamp’s founders. The creation of QSP
tokens thus occurred through a centralized process, in contrast to Bitcoin and Ethereum. This
would not have been apparent at issuance, however, to a reasonable investor. Rather, it was only
after the passage of time and disclosure of additional information about the issuer’s intent, process
of management, and success in allowing decentralization to arise that a reasonable purchaser could
know that he or she had acquired a security. Purchasers were thereby misled into believing that
69. Within the last year, however, the SEC has clarified, pursuant to its statutorily
delegated authority, and with the benefit of labor-intensive research and investigations, that many
ERC-20 tokens, including QSP, are securities. On April 3, 2019, as noted, the SEC published a
framework for analyzing whether a digital asset is an investment contract and whether offers and
sales of a digital asset are securities transactions.” Among the most significant statements therein
is the SEC’s description of how to analyze the various facts surrounding ICOs in determining
whether a given digital asset, like QSP, is a security. Under application of the Framework, the
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70. In the Framework, the SEC cautioned potential issuers: “If you are considering an
Initial Coin Offering, sometimes referred to as an ‘ICO,’ or otherwise engaging in the offer, sale,
or distribution of a digital asset, you need to consider whether the U.S. federal securities laws
The U.S. Supreme Court’s Howey case and subsequent case law
have found that an “investment contract” exists when there is the
investment of money in a common enterprise with a reasonable
expectation of profits to be derived from the efforts of others. The
so-called “Howey test” applies to any contract, scheme, or
transaction, regardless of whether it has any of the characteristics of
typical securities. The focus of the Howey analysis is not only on the
form and terms of the instrument itself (in this case, the digital asset)
but also on the circumstances surrounding the digital asset and the
manner in which it is offered, sold, or resold (which includes
secondary market sales). Therefore, issuers and other persons and
entities engaged in the marketing, offer, sale, resale, or distribution
of any digital asset will need to analyze the relevant transactions to
determine if the federal securities laws apply.
Investors who bought QSP tokens invested money or other valuable consideration, such as
of profit based upon Quantstamp’s efforts, including, among other things, Quantstamp obtaining
a. QSP Token Purchasers Invested Money
consideration for purposes of Howey. The Framework states: “The first prong of the Howey test
is typically satisfied in an offer and sale of a digital asset because the digital asset is purchased or
otherwise acquired in exchange for value, whether in the form of traditional (or fiat) currency,
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72. Investors invested traditional and other digital currencies, such as bitcoin and ether,
to purchase the QSP tokens. QSP tokens were listed on many cryptocurrency exchanges, and those
cryptocurrency exchanges permitted investors to purchase QSP with bitcoin and ether.
b. QSP Token Investors Participated In A Common Enterprise
73. The SEC Framework states: “In evaluating digital assets, we have found that a
‘common enterprise’ typically exists.” This is “because the fortunes of digital asset purchasers
have been linked to each other or to the success of the promoter’s efforts.”
74. The QSP tokens are no different. Investors were passive participants in the QSP
token ICO and the profits of each investor were intertwined with those of both Quantstamp and of
other investors. Quantstamp was responsible for supporting QSP, pooled investors’ assets, and
controlled those assets. Quantstamp also retained a significant stake in QSP, thus sharing in the
75. To this effect, Quantstamp made clear in its whitepaper that at the time of the ICO
in November 2017, the underlying technological success of the project and the corresponding
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a network or “ecosystem” on which it could be used being fully developed. For pre-functional
tokens, such as QSP, the primary purpose for purchasing the token was to make a profit, rather
79. Alluding to the “AP” (the “Active Participant”), which is the promoter, sponsor, or
other third party that “provides essential managerial efforts that affect the success of the enterprise,
“the Framework identifies a series of factually intense questions underscoring both the time the
SEC had spent considering these issues and the challenges a layperson would face in analyzing
whether a digital asset constitutes a security. In particular, the Framework lays out a number of
characteristics to assess whether the “reasonable expectation of profits” element is met with respect
The more the following characteristics are present, the more likely it is that there is
a reasonable expectation of profit:
• The digital asset gives the holder rights to share in the enterprise's income
or profits or to realize gain from capital appreciation of the digital asset.
o The opportunity may result from appreciation in the value of the digital
asset that comes, at least in part, from the operation, promotion,
improvement, or other positive developments in the network,
particularly if there is a secondary trading market that enables digital
asset holders to resell their digital assets and realize gains.
o This also can be the case where the digital asset gives the holder rights
to dividends or distributions.
• Purchasers reasonably would expect that an AP's efforts will result in capital
appreciation of the digital asset and therefore be able to earn a return on
their purchase.
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• The AP is able to benefit from its efforts as a result of holding the same
class of digital assets as those being distributed to the public.
o The intended use of the proceeds from the sale of the digital asset is
to develop the network or digital asset.
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80. The SEC Framework clarifies that investors purchased the QSP tokens with a
Team & Advisors were personally allocated 20 percent of the QSP tokens, thus benefitting from
82. The token allocation also makes clear that Quantstamp intended to expend funds
from the proceeds to build the functionality of its protocol through “product development.”
Indeed, another screenshot indicated that should the ICO raise $30 million (which it did),
Quantstamp would “fund 27 engineers to work full-time for 5 years” following the ICO and “ramp
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83. Investment analysis of QSP tokens clearly indicates tokens were viewed as intended
to provide a return on investment: analysts were “bullish” on QSP tokens because of factors such
as “growth potential,” the “strong team,” the “constrained supply” and the likelihood of the tokens
84. And the expectation of a return on investment, as well as that the managerial efforts
of Quantstamp were key to that return on investment, was also made clear in reports following the
ICO that the Quantstamp “team has been undermining the value of the token it used to raise
millions” by accepting fiat currency rather than only QSP tokens to access its protocol. QSP
purchasers were concerned about that conduct, because “as a token holder, we only benefit from
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those willing to hold and find value in the token. If the use case is unclear, this will not translate to
increased ROI.”
85. Indeed, Quantstamp emphasized the transferability of QSP tokens on the secondary
market of cryptocurrency exchanges, for example retweeting when major exchanges announced
the listing of QSP tokens just a day after the end of the QSP ICO:
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86. And Quantstamp emphasized in its whitepaper that the future functionality of its
protocol would exponentially increase demand for QSP tokens, since contract creators would “pay
QSP tokens to get their smart contract verified” and as “the number of smart contracts grows
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Quantstamp represented that “[o]ver time, we expect every Ethereum smart contract to use the
investors in the Quantstamp tokens made their investment with a reasonable expectation of profits.
d. Investors Expected Profits From The QSP Tokens To Be Derived From The
Managerial Efforts Of Issuers
87. The SEC Framework provides that the “inquiry into whether a purchaser is relying
on the efforts of others focuses on two key issues: Does the purchaser reasonably expect to rely on
the efforts of an [Active Participant]? Are those efforts ‘the undeniably significant ones, those
essential managerial efforts which affect the failure or success of the enterprise,’ as opposed to
88. The SEC explained in its April 2019 Framework, further underlining the depth of
study the agency had devoted to the matter over the years and the complexity of such legal analysis
from the perspective of a reasonable investor, that the more of the following characteristics that
are present, “the more likely it is that a purchaser of a digital asset is relying on the ‘efforts of
others’”:
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• An AP creates or supports a market for, or the price of, the digital asset.
This can include, for example, an AP that: (1) controls the creation and
issuance of the digital asset; or (2) takes other actions to support a market
price of the digital asset, such as by limiting supply or ensuring scarcity,
through, for example, buybacks, “burning,” or other activities.
• An AP has a lead or central role in the direction of the ongoing development
of the network or the digital asset. In particular, an AP plays a lead or central
role in deciding governance issues, code updates, or how third parties
participate in the validation of transactions that occur with respect to the
digital asset.
• An AP has a continuing managerial role in making decisions about or
exercising judgment concerning the network or the characteristics or rights
the digital asset represents including, for example:
o Determining whether and how to compensate persons providing
services to the network or to the entity or entities charged with
oversight of the network.
o Determining whether and where the digital asset will trade. For
example, purchasers may reasonably rely on an AP for liquidity,
such as where the AP has arranged, or promised to arrange for, the
trading of the digital asset on a secondary market or platform.
o Determining who will receive additional digital assets and under
what conditions.
o Making or contributing to managerial level business decisions, such
as how to deploy funds raised from sales of the digital asset.
o Playing a leading role in the validation or confirmation of
transactions on the network, or in some other way having
responsibility for the ongoing security of the network.
o Making other managerial judgements or decisions that will directly
or indirectly impact the success of the network or the value of the
digital asset generally.
• Purchasers would reasonably expect the AP to undertake efforts to promote
its own interests and enhance the value of the network or digital asset, such
as where:
o The AP has the ability to realize capital appreciation from the value
of the digital asset. This can be demonstrated, for example, if the AP
retains a stake or interest in the digital asset. In these instances,
purchasers would reasonably expect the AP to undertake efforts to
promote its own interests and enhance the value of the network or
digital asset.
o The AP distributes the digital asset as compensation to management
or the AP’s compensation is tied to the price of the digital asset in
the secondary market. To the extent these facts are present, the
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89. Shifting its focus to the numerous facts bearing on the nature of the digital asset at
• The distributed ledger network and digital asset are fully developed and
operational.
• Holders of the digital asset are immediately able to use it for its intended
functionality on the network, particularly where there are built-in incentives
to encourage such use.
• Prospects for appreciation in the value of the digital asset are limited. For
example, the design of the digital asset provides that its value will remain
constant or even degrade over time, and, therefore, a reasonable purchaser
would not be expected to hold the digital asset for extended periods as an
investment.
o This means that it is possible to pay for goods or services with the
digital asset without first having to convert it to another digital asset
or real currency.
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• Any economic benefit that may be derived from appreciation in the value
of the digital asset is incidental to obtaining the right to use it for its intended
functionality.
• Potential purchasers have the ability to use the network and use (or have
used) the digital asset for its intended functionality.
• Restrictions on the transferability of the digital asset are consistent with the
asset's use and not facilitating a speculative market.
managerial efforts of others to realize value from their investments. The success of these
managerial efforts in developing the networks on which these tokens will operate is the primary
factor in their price, that is, until such tokens transition into being functional utility tokens. The
QSP token was a security at issuance because profits from QSP would be derived primarily from
the managerial efforts of Quantstamp in developing the associated network on which QSP would
function, rather than having its profit derived from market forces of supply and demand, such as
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91. This dependency, however, on the managerial efforts of Quantstamp was not
apparent at issuance to a reasonable investor. Considering the limited available information about
how QSP was designed and intended to operate, if such an investor were even able to interpret the
relevant law at the time, a reasonable investor lacked sufficient bases to conclude whether QSP
was a security until the platforms at issue, and its relevant “ecosystem,” had been given time to
develop. In the interim, the investor lacked the facts necessary to conclude—let alone formally
allege in court—that the token she had acquired was a security. It was only after the passage of
some significant amount of time, and only with more information about Quantstamp’s intent,
process of management, and lack of success in allowing decentralization to arise, that an investor
could reasonably determine that a token that was advertised as something other than a security was
92. Investors’ profits in QSP tokens were to be derived from the managerial efforts of
others, specifically Quantstamp and its co-founders and development teams. QSP token investors
relied on the managerial and entrepreneurial efforts of Quantstamp and their executive and
development teams to manage and develop the projects funded by the QSP ICO.
93. Indeed, one of the few statements on the cover page of the QSP whitepaper is that
“[o]ur team is made of up of software testing experts who collectively have over 500 Google
Scholar citations.”
94. Both Stewart and Ma’s biographies were featured in the QSP whitepaper and were
held out to be integral parts of the success of QSP. In the whitepaper, Stewart’s expertise and
credentials in cryptological projects are highlighted, including spending “nearly 5 years as part of
Canada’s cryptologic agency in the Department of National Defense.” Similarly, the whitepaper
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Bitcoin HFT Fund” and his record of “zero notable incidents in nearly a decade of reliably handling
95. Quantstamp touts their broader team as well, stating “[w]e are a diverse and talented
team of PhDs and security professionals with a wealth of experience. We come from companies
like Google, Facebook, Apple, Goldman Sachs, BMW, Visa, and MathWorks. Together, we are
here to do some of the best work of our careers, driving smart contract security while defining a
96. One self-described token holder, explaining how “value is accrued to the QSP
token,” stated that “Quantstamp isn’t shy about the caliber of their team, and rightfully so. Their
team is filled with security PHD’s (with a huge amount of publications behind them combined)
97. Under this Framework, however complex the resolution of the issue would strike a
reasonable investor, QSP satisfies most if not all of the factors described as relevant to its
determination that a digital asset is a security. Quantstamp created QSP tokens from thin air.
Quantstamp represented that it would develop a “Quantstamp ecosystem,” (i.e., the overall
network of individuals using QSP or participating in the development of its network) that would
increase the value of QSP tokens. Plaintiff and the Class reasonably expected Quantstamp to
provide significant managerial efforts, to develop and improve the QSP ecosystem, to develop and
sustain a supportive network, and to secure listings at exchanges through which QSP tokens could
be traded or liquidated. And Quantstamp represented that it would provide significant managerial
efforts to achieve these objectives and make the issued ERC-20 token a success.
H. The SEC Has Concluded That Tokens Such As QSP Are Securities
98. On September 30, 2019, the SEC found that another issuer of a similar digital token,
Block.one, had violated the Securities Act through its unregistered sale to U.S. investors of a token
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called EOS. EOS, like QSP, was a digital token that was not marketed to investors as a security,
of money in a common enterprise with a reasonable expectation of profits to be derived from the
efforts of others. This enforcement action occurred over two years after Block.one began selling
EOS to the public, further underscoring the complexity of these issues for lay investors.
99. In arriving at its determination that the EOS token is a security, the SEC reached
• “Companies that offer or sell securities to US investors must comply with the
securities laws, irrespective of the industry they operate in or the labels they place
on the investment products they offer.”
• “Block.one did not provide ICO investors the information they were entitled to as
participants in a securities offering.”
• “Block.one violated Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the Securities Act by offering and
selling these securities without having a registration statement filed or in effect with
the Commission or qualifying for an exemption from registration.”
it would pay $24 million to the SEC. The SEC’s recent conclusion—that EOS is a
I. The Class Has Suffered Significant Damages From Defendants’ Actions
100. The QSP tokens today are worth far less than the price Plaintiff and the Class paid
for them. Indeed, QSP is now down more than 99 percent from its 2018 high. As a direct result
of Defendants’ issuance, promotion, and sale of unregistered securities, Plaintiff and the Class—
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many of whom are retail investors who lack the technical and financial sophistication necessary to
have evaluated the risks associated with their investments in the QSP token—have suffered
101. To the extent Plaintiff and the Class still hold any QSP tokens, they hereby demand
V. CLASS ALLEGATIONS
102. Plaintiff brings this action as a class action pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 23 and seeks
certification of the following Class: all persons who purchased QSP tokens which were first sold
on or about November 17, 2017. The Class Period is thus November 17, 2017, through the present.
103. The Class excludes individuals subject to any enforceable arbitration clause
contained in any of the purchase agreements executed in connection with the Quantstamp
ICO. The Class includes all other individuals who purchased QSP tokens, including those
individuals who purchased QSP tokens in sales made through online cryptocurrency exchanges.
104. Excluded from the Class are Defendants, their officers and directors, and members
of their immediate families or their legal representatives, heirs, successors or assigns and any entity
105. Plaintiff reserves the right to amend the Class definition if investigation or
discovery indicate that the definition should be narrowed, expanded, or otherwise modified.
106. The members of the Class are so numerous that joinder of all members is
impracticable. The precise number of Class members is unknown to Plaintiff at this time, but it is
107. Members of the Class are readily ascertainable and identifiable. Members of the
Class may be identified by publicly accessible blockchain ledger information and records
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maintained by Defendants or their agents. They may be notified of the pendency of this action by
electronic mail using a form of notice customarily used in securities class actions.
108. Plaintiff’s claims are typical of the claims of the Class members as all Class
members are similarly affected by Defendants’ respective wrongful conduct in violation of the
laws complained of herein. Plaintiff does not have any interest that is in conflict with the interests
109. Plaintiff and members of the Class sustained damages from Defendants’ common
course of unlawful conduct based upon the loss in market value of the QSP tokens.
110. Plaintiff has fairly and adequately protected, and will continue to fairly and
adequately protect, the interests of the members of the Class and has retained counsel competent
and experienced in class actions and securities litigation. Plaintiff has no interests antagonistic to
111. Common questions and answers of law and fact exist as to all Class members and
predominate over any questions solely affecting individual members of the Class, including but
• Whether the Class members are entitled to recover the monies they paid thereunder.
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112. A class action is superior to all other available methods for the fair and efficient
adjudication of this controversy since joinder of all members is impracticable. Furthermore, as the
damages suffered by some of the individual Class members may be relatively small, the expense
and burden of individual litigation makes it impossible for members of the Class to individually
113. There will be no difficulty in the management of this action as a class action.
FIRST CAUSE OF ACTION
Unregistered Offer and Sale of Securities
Sections 5 and 12(a)(1) of the Securities Act
(Quantstamp)
115. Section 5(a) of the Securities Act states: “Unless a registration statement is in effect
as to a security, it shall be unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly (1) to make use of any
to sell such security through the use or medium of any prospectus or otherwise; or (2) to carry or
cause to be carried through the mails or in interstate commerce, by any means or instruments of
transportation, any such security for the purpose of sale or for delivery after sale.” 15 U.S.C. §
77e(a).
116. Section 5(c) of the Securities Act states: “It shall be unlawful for any person,
in interstate commerce or of the mails to offer to sell or offer to buy through the use or medium of
any prospectus or otherwise any security, unless a registration statement has been filed as to such
security, or while the registration statement is the subject of a refusal order or stop order or (prior
to the effective date of the registration statement) any public proceeding or examination under
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117. When issued, the QSP tokens were securities within the meaning of Section 2(a)(1)
of the Securities Act, Id. § 77b(a)(1). Quantstamp promoted, solicited or sold purchases of QSP
tokens from Plaintiff and members of the Class. Quantstamp thus directly or indirectly made use
to offer to sell or to sell securities, or to carry or cause such securities to be carried through the
mails or in interstate commerce for the purpose of sale or for delivery after sale. No registration
statements have been filed with the SEC or have been in effect with respect to any of the offerings
alleged herein.
118. Section 12(a)(1) of the Securities Act provides in relevant part: “Any person who
offers or sells a security in violation of section 77e of this title …shall be liable, subject to
subsection (b), to the person purchasing such security from him, who may sue either at law or in
equity in any court of competent jurisdiction, to recover the consideration paid for such security
with interest thereon, less the amount of any income received thereon, upon the tender of such
119. Accordingly, Quantstamp has violated Sections 5(a), 5(c), and 12(a)(1) of the
120. Plaintiff and the Class seek rescissory damages with respect to purchases of QSP
tokens within the last three years and within one year from when an investor could adequately
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SECOND CAUSE OF ACTION
Control Person Liability for Violations of
Sections 5 and 12(a)(1) of the Securities Act
(Ma and Stewart)
122. This Count is asserted against the Individual Defendants for violations of Section
123. Each of the Individual Defendants, by virtue of his offices, stock ownership,
agency, agreements or understandings, and specific acts were, at the time of the wrongs alleged
herein, and as set forth herein, had the power and authority to direct the management and activities
of Quantstamp and its employees, and to cause Quantstamp to engage in the wrongful conduct
complained of herein. Each Individual Defendant had and exercised the power and influence to
124. The Individual Defendants had and have the power to direct or cause the direction
125. The Individual Defendants, separately or together, had sufficient influence to have
126. The Individual Defendants, separately or together, jointly participated in, and/or
127. By virtue of the conduct alleged herein, the Individual Defendants are liable for the
wrongful conduct complained of herein and are liable to Plaintiff and the Class for rescission
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THIRD CAUSE OF ACTION
Unregistered Offer and Sale of Securities
Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581-33
(Quantstamp)
129. The Texas Securities Act forbids the offer or sale of unregistered securities. Tex.
Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581-7(A)(1). Any person who unlawfully offers or sells an unregistered
security “is liable to the person buying the security from him, who may sue either at law or in
equity for rescission or for damages if the buyer no longer owns the security.” Id. art. 581-
33(A)(1).
130. When issued, the QSP tokens were securities within the meaning of Tex. Rev. Civ.
Stat. art. 581-4(A). Quantstamp sold or solicited purchases of the QSP tokens to Plaintiff and
members of the Class. The QSP tokens were neither registered as required under the Texas
131. The QSP tokens were offered or sold in the State of Texas, including without
132. Accordingly, Quantstamp has violated the Texas Securities Act through
133. Neither Plaintiff nor any Class members have received a rescission offer to refund
the consideration paid for the QSP tokens that also meets the requirements of Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat.
134. Plaintiff and Class members who currently own QSP tokens hereby make any
necessary tender and seek the consideration paid for any QSP tokens purchased in the last three
years plus interest thereon at the legal rate from the date of payment, less the amount of any income
received on the QSP tokens, costs, and reasonable attorneys’ fees if the Court finds that the
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recovery would be equitable in the circumstances; together with all other remedies available to
them.
135. Plaintiff and Class members who no longer own QSP tokens seek damages for
purchases of QSP tokens within the last three years, in the amount of the consideration the buyer
paid for the QSP tokens plus interest thereon at the legal rate from the date of payment by the
buyer, less the greater of: (i) the value of the QSP tokens at the time the buyer disposed of them
plus the amount of any income the buyer received on the QSP tokens; or (ii) the actual
consideration received for the QSP tokens at the time the buyer disposed of them plus the amount
of any income the buyer received on the QSP tokens; together with costs, reasonable attorneys’
fees if the Court finds that the recovery would be equitable in the circumstances, and all other
FOURTH CAUSE OF ACTION
Control Person Liability for Unregistered Offer and Sale of Securities
Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581-33
(Ma and Stewart)
137. Every person who directly or indirectly controls a seller liable under the Texas
Securities Act for unlawfully selling unregistered securities is jointly and severally liable with and
to the same extent as the seller, unless the controlling person “sustains the burden of proof that he
did not know, and in the exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of the existence of the
facts by reason of which the liability is alleged to exist.” Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat. art. 581-33(F).
138. When issued, the QSP tokens were securities within the meaning of Tex. Rev. Civ.
Stat. art. 581-4(A). Quantstamp sold or solicited purchases of the QSP tokens to Plaintiff and
members of the Class. The QSP tokens were neither registered as required under the Texas
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139. The QSP tokens were offered or sold in the State of Texas, including without
140. Each of the Individual Defendants, by virtue of his offices, stock ownership,
agency, agreements or understandings, and specific acts had, at the time of the wrongs alleged
herein, and as set forth herein, the power and authority to directly or indirectly control the
management and activities of Quantstamp and its employees, and to cause Quantstamp to engage
in the wrongful conduct complained of herein. Each Individual Defendant had and exercised the
power and influence to cause the unlawful sales of unregistered securities as described herein.
controlled Quantstamp, have violated the Texas Securities Act through Quantstamp’s sale of
unregistered securities.
142. Neither Plaintiff nor any Class members has received a rescission offer to refund
the consideration paid for the QSP tokens that also meets the requirements of Tex. Rev. Civ. Stat.
143. Plaintiff and Class members who own QSP tokens hereby make any necessary
tender and seek the consideration paid for any QSP tokens purchased in the last three years plus
interest thereon at the legal rate from the date of payment, less the amount of any income received
on the QSP tokens, costs, and reasonable attorneys’ fees if the Court finds that the recovery would
144. Plaintiff and Class members who no longer own QSP tokens seek damages for
purchases of QSP tokens in the last three years, in the amount of the consideration the buyer paid
for the QSP tokens plus interest thereon at the legal rate from the date of payment by the buyer,
less the greater of: (i) the value of the QSP tokens at the time the buyer disposed of them plus the
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amount of any income the buyer received on the QSP tokens; or (ii) the actual consideration
received for the QSP tokens at the time the buyer disposed of them plus the amount of any income
the buyer received on the QSP tokens; together with costs, reasonable attorneys’ fees if the Court
finds that the recovery would be equitable, and all other remedies available to them.
PRAYER FOR RELIEF
145. On behalf of himself and the Class, Plaintiff requests relief as follows:
(a) That the Court determines that this action may be maintained as a class action,
undersigned be named as Lead Class Counsel of the Class, and direct that notice
(b) That the Court enter an order declaring that Defendants’ actions, as set forth in
this Complaint, violate the federal and state laws set forth above;
(c) That the Court award Plaintiff and the Class damages in an amount to be
determined at trial;
(d) That the Court issue appropriate equitable and any other relief against
(e) That the Court award Plaintiff and the Class pre- and post-judgment interest
(f) That the Court award Plaintiff and the Class their reasonable attorneys’ fees and
(g) That the Court award any and all other such relief as the Court may deem just
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JURY TRIAL
146. Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 38(b), Plaintiff respectfully demands a
Respectfully submitted,
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CERTIFICATION OF
SECURITIES CLASS ACTION COMPLAINT
I, Chase Williams, hereby certify that the following is true and correct to the best of my
knowledge, information, and belief:
1. I have reviewed the complaint filed herein (the “Complaint”), and have authorized the
filing of a similar complaint and a lead plaintiff motion on my behalf.
2. I did not purchase the securities at issue in the Complaint at the direction of my counsel
or in order to participate in any private action arising under the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities
Act”) or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the “Exchange Act”).
3. I am willing to serve as a representative party on behalf of the class (the “Class”) as
defined in the Complaint, including providing testimony at deposition and trial, if necessary.
4. During the Class Period (as defined in the Complaint), I purchased and/or sold the
unregistered securities: Quantstamp (“QSP”).
5. During the three-year period preceding the date of this Certification, I have not sought to
serve as a representative party on behalf of a class in any private action arising under the Securities Act or
the Exchange Act.
6. I will not accept any payment for serving as a representative party on behalf of the Class
beyond my pro rata share of any possible recovery, except for an award, as ordered by the court, for
reasonable costs and expenses (including lost wages) directly relating to my representation of the Class.
7. I understand that executing this Certification is not a prerequisite to participation in this
Class Action as members of the Class.
_______________________
Chase Williams
Houston, Texas