The Guardian (USA)

FTX was run as ‘personal fiefdom’ of Sam Bankman-Fried, court hears

- Dominic Rushe

Bankrupt cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX was run as the “personal fiefdom” of founder Sam Bankman-Fried, with one of the company’s units spending $300m on real estate in the Bahamas for the use of its executives, a court heard on Tuesday.

The hearing in Delaware’s bankruptcy court is the first since FTX declared insolvency earlier this month.

A “substantia­l amount” of FTX Group’s assets “have either been stolen or are missing”, James Bromley, co-head of the restructur­ing practice at law firm Sullivan & Cromwell, told judge John Dorsey.

“FTX was in the control of inexperien­ced and unsophisti­cated individual­s, and some or all of them were compromise­d individual­s,” said Bromley.

News of the Bahamas property spree follows a report from Reuters that Bankman-Fried’s FTX, his parents and senior executives of the cryptocurr­ency exchange bought at least 19 properties worth nearly $121m in the Bahamas over the past two years, according to official property records.

Bromley told the court Congress had requested – “some would say demanded” – that FTX’s new chief executive John Ray III appear before lawmakers in December. Any hearing is likely to be politicall­y charged. FTX was a major donor to Democratic politician­s.

“Will Joe Biden and Democrats who cashed Bankman-Fried’s checks give that money to the people SBF [Sam Bankman-Fried] screwed?” the Republican senator Ted Cruz wrote on Twitter as the hearing took place.

Bromley said FTX was in “constant communicat­ion” with the justice department and the US attorney’s office in New York, which has opened a criminal investigat­ion.

The failed cryptocurr­ency platform’s 50 biggest customers are owed nearly $3.1bn after its sudden collapse, according to court documents. The court was told FTX’s customers were largely based offshore in the Cayman and Virgin Islands, which accounted for a third of customers between them. The next two biggest customer bases were China and the UK.

The firm has so far located approximat­ely $1.4bn in cash that it says belongs to the business, more than double the figure reported to the court last week.

Dorsey agreed to redact the names of customers with funds frozen on the exchange for now, but said he would revisit that decision.

Ray, who has overseen some of the biggest bankruptci­es ever, including the collapse of the energy giant Enron, has described FTX’s failure as “unpreceden­ted”. Its failure has shaken the entire cryptocurr­ency market.

“Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworth­y financial informatio­n as occurred here,” he said in court documents filed last week.

A lawsuit has been filed against Bankman-Fried, the company and the celebritie­s, including Larry David, Naomi Osaka, Gisele Bündchen and Tom Brady, who promoted it. Prosecutor­s and regulators have also begun investigat­ions into the company.

The next hearing on FTX’s bankruptcy will take place on 16 December.

 ?? Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images ?? FTX Arena in Miami, Florida. The failed cryptocurr­ency platform’s 50 biggest customers are owed nearly $3.1bn after its sudden collapse.
Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images FTX Arena in Miami, Florida. The failed cryptocurr­ency platform’s 50 biggest customers are owed nearly $3.1bn after its sudden collapse.

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