The Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act has picked up a significant and unexpected ally. The National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) formally endorsed the legislation on July 1, becoming the first major law enforcement organization to publicly back the bill.
In a letter addressed to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, NOBLE National President Reneé Hall concluded that the legislation "contains several provisions that would provide law enforcement with meaningful new capabilities while preserving longstanding criminal enforcement authorities." The group said the bill would expand regulatory obligations for digital asset industry participants, strengthen digital asset seizure authority and transparency, and tighten oversight of virtual asset kiosks.
A Divided Law Enforcement Landscape
The endorsement carries added weight because it lands directly against earlier opposition from within the law enforcement community. It comes after a June letter from four of the nation's largest police and prosecutor coalitions, which warned that a key provision of the bill could hobble criminal investigations. The White House Crypto Council had convened representatives from the National Sheriffs' Association, the Fraternal Order of Police, and the National District Attorneys' Association to address law enforcement objections to Section 604 of the CLARITY Act, the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act.
That section is at the heart of the dispute. The Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act protects software developers that do not control people's money from being treated as money transmitters. Critics argue broad exemptions could reduce compliance hooks in investigations involving illicit fund flows, while supporters say neutral software developers should not be regulated as financial intermediaries. NOBLE's letter openly acknowledged that "members of the law enforcement community have expressed differing perspectives" on the bill.
Where the Bill Stands
The Senate Banking Committee advanced the CLARITY Act in May by a vote of 15 to 9. On June 1, a new version of the bill was published and placed on the Senate Legislative Calendar, making it formally eligible for full Senate floor consideration. The bill has already passed the House.
The path to enactment, however, remains demanding. To become law, the bill must clear a 60-vote Senate floor threshold, be reconciled with the Senate Agriculture Committee's version, and then be merged with the House-passed text before reaching the president. The bill still needs at least seven Democratic votes to clear that threshold, with key supporters making their backing conditional on unresolved issues.
NOBLE's endorsement does not resolve those outstanding hurdles, but it does shift the political terrain. The strongest remaining argument against the CLARITY Act had been that law enforcement opposes it. That argument is now demonstrably contested from within law enforcement itself.
Sources:
The Crypto Times: NOBLE Becomes First Police Group to Endorse CLARITY Act
CNBC: Crypto industry scores win as Clarity Act clears Senate hurdle
Latham & Watkins: US Crypto Policy Tracker
