Taylor Lindman, Chainlink Labs’ deputy general counsel, has joined the US SEC’s Crypto Task Force as its new chief counsel.
The move places a senior legal figure from the Chainlink ecosystem under the SEC’s fast-moving digital assets unit.
It signals the SEC’s push to strengthen its crypto task force. The agency is hiring leaders with direct industry experience, a move highlighted in recent Chainlink news.
Chainlink Labs announced Taylor Lindman’s departure on X. The update, covered in recent Chainlink news, noted he spent five years at the company.
The firm also confirmed his appointment as the chief counsel on the SEC Crypto Task Force. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, who heads the task force, publicly admitted the hire as well.
Source: Hester Peirce, X
In practical terms, the position of chief counsel influences the task force’s interpretation of rules and evaluation of legal risk.
The position strengthens the SEC’s internal coordination. It helps divisions align as the agency considers applying securities laws to tokens, platforms, and new market structures.
Lindman is taking the position from Michael Selig. Selig left the role in December after becoming the chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
Lindman’s LinkedIn history reveals a career focused on regulatory work and financial law. At Chainlink, he served in several legal capacities, including associate general counsel and deputy general counsel.
Chainlink said it played a major role in its legal function. This came during a period when U.S. digital asset policy grew more active, a development noted in recent Chainlink news.
During his time there, Lindman was involved in ensuring compliance with both U.S. and international regulatory patterns. He was also a part of a delegation that met with the Crypto Task Force in March of 2025.
Chainlink said the talks focus on token taxonomy and securities record-keeping requirements. These issues form key fault lines in U.S. crypto oversight.
Before Chainlink, Lindman was an associate at Perkins Coie from 2018 through 2021. He also served at Debevoise & Plimpton from 2016 to 2018.
The task force gains legal expertise that bridges private sector product realities with regulatory compliance demands. This background equips it to navigate both domains effectively.
Peirce announced the first 14-person task force lineup in March 2025. That group combined staff from the SEC chair’s office and several internal divisions, as well as hires with some background in crypto policy.
The staffing approach seems to aim at quickening the work of the task force without impairing technical fluency.
Landon Zinda joined as a senior advisor after serving as Coin Center’s policy director from March 2023 until February 2025. His appointment adds valuable expertise.
Another senior advisor is Veronica Reynolds, who worked at Baker Hostetler. That’s a law firm that is known for its digital assets and Web3 practice.
These appointments show the SEC is building an internal team that can analyze crypto market structures. The agency is doing this without relying on traditional enforcement perspectives.
The mix also reflects a larger trend in Washington that regulators are increasingly recruited from the industry they regulate.
The SEC Crypto Task Force was created in a more friendly policy shift associated with the incoming Trump administration.
Since then, the task force has hosted roundtables and conducted outreach to solicit comments from academics, market participants, and industry builders.
Those sessions aim to identify where existing rules apply and where they fall short. They also seek to shape new guidance that can reduce uncertainty.
Lindman’s arrival may matter most in the details. The task force has been discussing topics such as surveillance, privacy, and market plumbing. They are subject to legal interpretation that can have rapid outcomes.
The post Chainlink News: Legal Executive Taylor Lindman Joins SEC Crypto Task Force appeared first on The Market Periodical.


