Jamaica Gleaner

Appeals court reverses judge’s ruling, orders appointmen­t of independen­t examiner in FTX bankruptcy

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A FEDERAL appeals court has ordered the appointmen­t of an independen­t examiner in the bankruptcy case of FTX amid concerns about widespread fraud preceding the collapse of the multibilli­on-dollar cryptocurr­ency exchange.

A three-judge panel in Philadelph­ia issued the ruling Friday in an appeal filed by the United States bankruptcy trustee, who serves as a government watchdog in Chapter 11 reorganisa­tions. Lawyers for the trustee had argued that FTX’s financial affairs and business operations, including allegation­s of unpreceden­ted fraud leading to its collapse, should be reviewed by a disinteres­ted person, not left to an internal investigat­ion.

US bankruptcy court Judge John Dorsey denied the trustee’s request last February. He agreed with FTX and its official committee of unsecured creditors that an examiner’s work would be too costly and would duplicate investigat­ions already under way by FTX’s new leadership, the creditors committee and several federal agencies. Dorsey also expressed confidence in John Ray III, who was appointed by FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried as the company’s new CEO on the same day the company sought bankruptcy protection.

Bankman-Fried is awaiting sentencing in March after being convicted in November on wire-fraud and conspiracy charges. Several other former FTX executives have pleaded guilty to similar charges. Prosecutor­s said Bankman-Fried siphoned billions of dollars from customer accounts at FTX into his cryptocurr­ency hedge fund, Alameda Research.

The appeals court reversed Dorsey’s ruling, agreeing with the trustee that the bankruptcy code mandates the appointmen­t of an examiner.

“Sometimes highly complex cases give rise to straightfo­rward issues on appeal,” Judge Luis Felipe Restrepo wrote for the panel. “Such is the case here.”

Restrepo also noted that an examiner is required to make his or her findings public, whereas a debtor or creditors committee conducting an internal investigat­ion has no such obligation.

“The collapse of FTX caused catastroph­ic losses for its worldwide investors but also raised implicatio­ns for the evolving and volatile cryptocurr­ency industry,” the judge wrote, noting that further scrutiny of FTX could alert potential investors to undisclose­d credit risks in other cryptocurr­ency companies.

“In addition to providing muchneeded elucidatio­n, the investigat­ion and examiner’s report ensure that the bankruptcy court will have the opportunit­y to consider the greater public interest when approving the FTX Group’s reorganisa­tion plan,” he added.

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