
'I didn't ever try to commit fraud on anyone,' FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried says
CBC
The man at the centre of collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX made his first public appearance since the saga began, telling a New York audience on Wednesday that it was never his intention to commit fraud.
Sam Bankman-Fried, the 30-year-old founder of FTX, appeared at the New York Times' Dealbook Summit on Wednesday, for an interview with journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin about what happened to cause his cryptocurrency firm to collapse into bankruptcy earlier this month.
The firm, once worth more than $32 billion US, entered bankruptcy protection on Nov. 11 after a whirlwind series of days that saw it go from trying to solve a liquidity crunch by merging with a rival, to having that deal fall apart and succumbing to a run on the bank as traders pulled out $6 billion in funds within three days.
Filings show the company owes almost $10 billion to various creditors, and at least $1 billion worth of customer deposits are missing.
Among numerous allegations, customer deposits at FTX appear to have been used as capital and collateral for loans for an investment firm called Alameda affiliated with him — an allegation that amounts to fraud, and one that he pushed back against strongly.
"I didn't ever try to commit fraud on anyone," he told Sorkin, "I didn't knowingly co-mingle funds."
While he acknowledged mistakes were made, Bankman-Fried rejected repeated attempts to characterize what happened at his cryptocurrency firm as being in any way malicious or illegal.
"I am deeply sorry about what happened," he said. "I was excited about the prospects of FTX a month ago, I saw it as a thriving, growing business."
Bankman-Fried has seen his personal net worth evaporate in the debacle, from more than $26 billion a year ago to "close to nothing" today — and he insisted that he doesn't have any of the money that has vanished.
"I don't have any hidden funds here. Everything I have, I am disclosing," he said.
"I'm down to one working credit card ... [and] hundreds of dollars or something like that, in a bank account."
He says, to his knowledge, there are enough funds at FTX to give users their money. But his hands are tied since he no longer has a formal role at the company since it entered bankruptcy proceedings.
"I believe that withdrawals could be opened up today and everyone could be made whole," he said.
John Jay Ray III, the restructuring expert who has been handling FTX's bankruptcy proceedings has said in legal filings that Bankman-Fried appears to have treated the company as his "personal fiefdom" and has called the fiasco a "complete failure of corporate controls."

The United States broke a longstanding diplomatic taboo by holding secret talks with the militant Palestinian group Hamas on securing the release of U.S. hostages held in Gaza, sources told Reuters on Wednesday, while U.S. President Donald Trump warned of "hell to pay" should the Palestinian militant group not comply.