Lawyers for the new board and its current head, John Ray, argue that a “substantial amount” of the company’s assets could have been stolen or are missing.

FTX filed for bankruptcy on November 11 and at the end of the same month, the company's new managers appeared for the first time before the bankruptcy court of the state of Delaware (USA) to begin the restructuring process.

The founder of the cryptocurrency platform FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried, promised this Friday to testify by videoconference before a committee of the United States House of Representatives next Tuesday.

In a Twitter message in which he responded to a question from Democratic Congresswoman Maxine Waters, Bankman-Fried assured that he still does not have access to much of his professional or personal data, but that he is still willing to testify. next December 13.

“There’s a limit to what I can say and I can’t be as helpful as I’d like to be,” lamented the disgraced entrepreneur.

Since FTX’s failure, Bankman-Fried maintains that he was unaware that client funds were redirected to his partner investment firm, Alameda, one of the main reasons that led to bankruptcy.

In a virtual interview broadcast live by The New York Times in November, Bankman-Fried said he did not “knowingly” mix funds, that he was not the one running Alameda and that he has only been aware of what was happening in recent weeks, when the facts have been revealed publicly.

FTX filed for bankruptcy on November 11 and at the end of the same month, the company’s new managers appeared for the first time before the bankruptcy court of the state of Delaware (USA) to begin the restructuring process.

Lawyers for the new board and its current head, John Ray, argue that a “substantial amount” of the company’s assets could have been stolen or are missing.

The new managers have also denounced that the company had a “total absence of corporate controls” and a lack of “reliable financial information”.

The platform, which was once valued at $32 billion, could have more than a million creditors around the world. So far, the company has admitted that it owes more than $3 billion to its top 50 creditors.

However, Bankman-Fried blames the bankruptcy in part on the massive sale of cryptocurrencies that occurred at the beginning of the year.

For the founder of the company, this sale halved FTX’s guarantee, of about 30,000 million dollars.

At that point, according to Bankman-Fried, the sale of cryptocurrencies continued, combined with a credit crunch and a “flight on the bank”, which reduced the guarantee to 9,000 million before FTX declared bankruptcy.

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