Swan Bitcoin has dismissed its lawsuit against Proton Management and several former employees, marking a major development in the long-running legal battle related to a Bitcoin mining venture involving Tether.
This is evident from a statement from Proton June 1a federal judge dismissed Swan’s lawsuit against all California defendants after Swan allegedly admitted in a related U.K. lawsuit that it did not own the trade secrets and proprietary assets at the heart of its original claims.
“The Court has now dismissed Swan’s entire case against all defendants,” Proton said in the press release.
The dispute stems from the collapse of a Bitcoin mining partnership linked to 2040 Energy, a joint venture that was reportedly backed primarily by Tether capital while Swan managed the operations.
Lawsuit focused on alleged trade secrets in the mining industry
Swan originally sued Proton and former employees in California after several members of its mining division left the company and later joined Proton.
The lawsuit accused the defendants of improperly taking proprietary mining infrastructure, trade secrets and internal operational materials related to Swan’s mining operations.
Proton and its former employees consistently denied these allegations.
In the new statement, Proton argues that Swan “never owned its own mining company” and did not own the intellectual property underlying the case.
The release further claimed that Swan’s position in British lawsuits ultimately forced the company to dismiss the California lawsuit.
British court cases appear to have reshaped the dispute
The UK proceedings became increasingly important to the wider case after Tether separately filed suit in the High Court of England and Wales in relation to the mining venture and related ownership disputes.
According to Proton’s statement, Swan’s concessions in the UK case now prevent the company from pursuing the same trade secret claims in other locations.
However, Proton’s characterization of the legal outcome has not yet been independently confirmed through a separate summary of the court decision.
The statement also suggested Swan could continue to pursue other claims or legal strategies related to the broader dispute.
A legal battle exposed the tensions surrounding the control of mining companies
The case exposed growing tensions around control of large-scale Bitcoin mining infrastructure and operational ownership agreements between crypto companies and financial backers.
Tether’s involvement drew particular attention after reports suggested the stablecoin issuer had invested hundreds of millions of dollars in the mining operation linked to the dispute.
The lawsuit also became one of the closely watched corporate conflicts in the Bitcoin mining sector.
Final summary
- Swan Bitcoin has dismissed its lawsuit against Proton and former employees following developments related to UK lawsuits.
- Proton claims Swan admitted it did not own the trade secrets at the heart of the California case, although broader mining disputes may continue.
