FTX Leadership Seeks Return of Over $1B in Cash, Stocks From Former Executives
A lawsuit alleges that fraudulent transfers of cash and shares were used to finance political donations, real estate buys, Sam Bankman-Fried’s criminal defense, and even potentially an island.

The estate for bankrupt crypto exchange FTX is looking to recover over $1 billion in cash and shares from founder Sam Bankman-Fried and other executives it alleges were fraudulently transferred to themselves.
The new lawsuit, filed Thursday, alleges that the defendants used their close control over the FTX Group's businesses and systems to perpetrate what it calls a massive fraud between February 2020 and November 2022, squandering FTX’s assets on luxury homes, political and "charitable" contributions, and various investments.
Read more: Alameda Seeks Return of $700M Paid to ‘Super Networkers’ for Celebrity, Political Access
According to the filing, FTX issued more than $725 million worth of equity to Bankman-Fried, former CTO and Co-Founder Gary Wang, Director of Engineering Nishad Singh, and former Alameda Research CEO Caroline Ellison. Of this $725 million, $447.8 million allegedly went to Singh, and the lawsuit documents how it was recorded as a loan between Singh, trading arm Alameda and FTX.
“In reality, no one paid for the shares, and no one intended to do so,” the lawsuit reads.
The lawsuit also alleges that FTX transferred $4.86 million to the group in order to purchase real estate, and Bankman-Fried’s father, Allen “Joe” Bankman, received $10 million from Alameda to be used for legal expenses.
It also says that Gabriel Bankman-Fried, Sam’s brother, planned to purchase the nation of Nauru – a small island northeast of Australia – with FTX Foundation funds, and more than $100 million in political donations to both parties and political action committees were made from funds mixed with FTX customer money.
Caroline Ellison, who has a plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office of the Southern District of New York, is accused of awarding herself a $22.5 million bonus at the height of FTX’s crisis last November.
Recently, the U.S. Department of Justice asked a court to silence Bankman-Fried from making out-of-court statements about the case after he leaked Ellison’s private diary to the New York Times.
Read more: SBF Accused of Leaking Caroline Ellison's Private Diary by U.S. DOJ
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Crypto group counters Wall Street bankers with its own stablecoin principles for bill

After the bankers shared a document at the White House demanding a total ban on stablecoin yield, the crypto side answers that it needs some stablecoin rewards.
What to know:
- The U.S. Senate's crypto market structure bill has been waylaid by a dispute over something that's not related to market structure: yield on stablecoins.
- The Digital Chamber is offering a response to a position paper circulated earlier this week by bankers who oppose stablecoin yield.
- The crypto group's own principles documents argues that certain rewards are needed on stablecoin acvitity, but that the industry doesn't need to pursue products that directly threaten bank deposits business.












