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SEC Enforcement Chief Margaret Ryan Abruptly Resigns After Six Months

Margaret A. Ryan, the Securities and Exchange Commission’s enforcement chief, abruptly resigned Monday just six months after taking the job, an unusually short tenure for the agency’s top cop on Wall Street. The SEC gave no reason for her departure, and Ryan, a former Marine and judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, could not be reached for comment. Her exit comes as SEC Chair Paul S. Atkins steers the commission through a broader, business‑friendly turn in President Trump’s second term, including a marked retreat from Biden‑era crackdowns on Wall Street and cryptocurrency firms; a New York Times investigation previously found the agency had eased up on more than 60 percent of pending crypto lawsuits after Trump returned to office. In a statement, Atkins framed the shift as bringing enforcement back to Congress’s “original intent” and credited Ryan with helping that effort, while critics inside and outside the agency have pointed to depressed morale and key departures tied to the pullback. Deputy enforcement chief Sam Waldon will serve as acting director while the SEC searches for a permanent successor, leaving questions about how aggressively the regulator will pursue complex financial fraud and volatile crypto markets at a time when political pressure favors lighter-touch oversight.

SEC and Financial Regulation Trump Administration Economic Policy

📌 Key Facts

  • Margaret A. Ryan resigned as SEC enforcement chief on March 16, 2026, after only six months in the role.
  • The SEC did not provide a reason for her sudden departure, and Ryan has not commented publicly.
  • Under Chair Paul S. Atkins and President Trump’s second-term agenda, the SEC has eased or paused more than 60% of crypto lawsuits that were pending when Trump returned to office.
  • Atkins says he is steering enforcement back to focusing on fraud and manipulation consistent with Congress’s “original intent,” a stance critics see as rolling back Biden-era crackdowns.
  • Deputy enforcement chief Sam Waldon has been named acting director while the agency searches for a permanent replacement.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2024, 24% of Black adults, 21% of Hispanic adults, and 28% of Asian adults in the US reported ever investing in, trading, or using cryptocurrency, compared to 12% of White adults.

Majority of Americans aren’t confident in the safety and reliability of cryptocurrency — Pew Research Center

In 2022, the share of consumers who paid with cryptocurrency was 6.3% for Black consumers, 4.4% for Hispanic consumers, and 1.4% for White consumers.

U.S. Consumers’ Use of Cryptocurrency for Payments — Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

In fiscal year 2024, the SEC distributed $345 million to harmed investors, contributing to over $2.7 billion returned since the start of a specific initiative.

SEC Announces Enforcement Results for Fiscal Year 2024 — U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

The US Secret Service seized $225.3 million in funds linked to cryptocurrency investment scams in 2025, marking the largest such seizure in history.

Largest Ever Seizure of Funds Related to Crypto Confidence Scams — U.S. Secret Service

📰 Source Timeline (1)

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March 16, 2026