Sam Bankman-Fried ran FTX like ‘personal fiefdom’ as firm spent $300M on luxury real estate

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Sam Bankman-Fried treated FTX like a “personal fiefdom,” as he and a handful of associates looted the now-defunct crypto exchange’s coffers to fund an epic spending spree that included a $300 million splurge on Bahamas real estate, lawyers for the company claimed.

FTX’s bankruptcy team detailed the wild spending under 30-year-old Bankman-Fried in a closely watched court hearing on Tuesday — revealing rampant mismanagement by top executives until the platform collapsed with more than $1 billion in client funds missing.

Attorneys said the $300 million spent on real estate was mostly used to buy mansions and beachfront vacation properties for Bankman-Fried and other senior FTX executives.

The purchases went undisclosed during a months-long media blitz in which the scruffy-looking Bankman-Fried, typically dressed in shorts and a T-shirt, portrayed himself as a socially conscious benefactor for Democrats and progressive causes.

“Unfortunately, the FTX debtors were not particularly well run, and that is an understatement,” attorney James Bromley of the law firm Sullivan & Cromwell said in a Delaware courtroom.

Bromley added the bankruptcy process had “allowed everyone for the first time to see under the covers and recognize the emperor had no clothes,” according to the Financial Times.

FTX
FTX declared bankruptcy earlier this month.
SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Under Bankman-Fried’s watch, “substantial amounts of money were spent on things not related to the business,” Bromley stated.

Attorneys are scrambling to parse FTX’s slipshod accounting to uncover what happened to client holdings. The bankrupt entity has an estimated 1 million creditors with losses that could reach several billion dollars. The top 50 creditors alone are owed more than $3 billion.

“We have witnessed one of the most abrupt and difficult collapses in the history of corporate America,” said Bromley.

Sam Bankman-Fried
Sam Bankman-Fried and his associates bought $300 million in luxury real estate.
TNS

The disclosures in Delaware court followed an earlier Reuters report revealing that Bankman-Fried’s parents, Stanford law professors Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, were among those in FTX’s circle who acquired luxury property in the Bahamas.

The report cited property records that showed Bankman and Fried co-signed the deed for a beach house in the exclusive Old Fort Bay gated community. The property was identified as a “vacation home” for the family.

When confronted with the records, a spokesperson for Bankman-Fried’s parents said they intend to return the property.

Albany Bahamas - Luxury Resort Community in The Bahamas.
A branch of FTX purchased seven beachfront condos for nearly $72 million in the ritzy Albany community.
Albany Bahamas

“Since before the bankruptcy proceedings, Mr. Bankman and Ms. Fried have been seeking to return the deed to the company and are awaiting further instructions,” a spokesperson for Bankman-Fried’s parents told the outlet.

In total, the report uncovered records for at least 19 properties with a total value of nearly $121 million.

A unit of FTX bought seven beachfront condos for nearly $72 million in the Bahamas’ ritzy Albany resort town — the same community where Bankman-Fried and his “cabal of roommates” lived while running FTX and its doomed sister cryptocurrency trading platform, Alameda Research.

Bahamas Penthouse
FTX executives ran the company from a luxury penthouse in the Bahamas.
Seaside Real Estate

The real estate disclosures were among the most notable details to emerge from the hearing during what has already been a chaotic bankruptcy process. The company’s representatives are planning to sell off parts of the business that are still viable.

FTX’s lawyers said the cryptocurrency platform has suffered “substantial” losses to its remaining assets due to a series of cyberattacks.

Attorneys said the company was investigating the circumstances behind a deal last year in which rival platform Binance sold off its stake in FTX.

Last week, the Wall Street Journal reported Bankman-Fried cashed out $300 million in 2021 just after FTX closed a $421 million fundraising round. At the time, he reportedly portrayed the cash grab to investors as a partial reimbursement for buying out Binance’s stake.

At its peak, FTX was once valued at a whopping $40 billion across its US and international properties. The number highlighted the stunning extent of the firm’s downfall into bankruptcy following a sudden liquidity crunch earlier this month.

Bahamas penthouse.
The penthouse went on the market after the crypto empire fell.
Seaside Real Estate

The chaos began after a CoinDesk report revealed Alameda was heavily invested in FTT, a token offered by FTX. The revelation crushed confidence in the token’s viability and led panicked investors to dump their holdings.

Bromley said FTX filed for bankruptcy after a crush of withdrawals that was an “effective run on the bank.”

Bankman-Fried has faced intense scrutiny for his personal role in the company’s freefall. The ex-CEO shocked the public last week after he ripped regulators and called ethics a “dumb game we woke Westerners play” in a wild interview with Vox.

Bankman-Fried also appeared to pin the blame for FTX’s collapse on Alameda — despite the fact that he also owned that firm and that his ex-lover Caroline Ellison served as its CEO.

With Post wires

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