A clean-shaven man with dark curly hair, wearing a dark suit and tie, looks into the camera as photographers and reporters surround him on a New York City sidewalk. A man in a suit behind him holds up his hands, as if attempting to clear a path.

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried arrives at the federal court in New York in February 2023. Timothy A. Clary/AFP/Getty

Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily.[1]

Sam Bankman-Fried was once called the “crypto king.” But in November 2022, his company, FTX, imploded within a matter of days. All around the world, customers of the cryptocurrency exchange were suddenly cut off from their money. 

“I tried to withdraw an amount, you know, and it would spin and say, your, your withdrawal is pending,” says Tareq Morad, an investor from Canada. “I remember myself doing that around 7, 8 o’clock at night, checking back, going to look: Okay, did it go through? Did it go through? No. No. No.”

Meanwhile, inside the company, employees were panicking. “All that we were told was there’s been a run on the bank and, somehow, money is missing and we don’t know who to trust,” remembers Caroline Papadopoulos, part of FTX’s accounting leadership at the time. 

Subscribe to Mother Jones podcasts on

Apple Podcasts[2] or your favorite podcast app.

This week on Reveal, through prison interviews with Bankman-Fried, his parents, FTX insiders, and customers, we take you through the frantic week of FTX’s collapse and the controversial and less well-known bankruptcy that followed. At a cost of nearly $1 billion, it has become one of the most expensive in history.

Read the FTX bankruptcy estate’s on-the-record statement[3] to Reveal.

References

  1. ^ Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily. (www.motherjones.com)
  2. ^ Apple Podcasts (podcasts.apple.com)
  3. ^ on-the-record statement (www.documentcloud.org)

By admin