Scan to download
BTC $79,055.78 -2.94%
ETH $2,225.89 -2.75%
BNB $672.44 -1.62%
XRP $1.43 -4.23%
SOL $89.19 -3.56%
TRX $0.3518 -0.48%
DOGE $0.1128 -3.30%
ADA $0.2614 -3.89%
BCH $426.82 -2.28%
LINK $10.08 -4.22%
HYPE $43.95 -2.82%
AAVE $93.06 -5.78%
SUI $1.09 -8.36%
XLM $0.1550 -4.97%
ZEC $516.16 -7.75%
BTC $79,055.78 -2.94%
ETH $2,225.89 -2.75%
BNB $672.44 -1.62%
XRP $1.43 -4.23%
SOL $89.19 -3.56%
TRX $0.3518 -0.48%
DOGE $0.1128 -3.30%
ADA $0.2614 -3.89%
BCH $426.82 -2.28%
LINK $10.08 -4.22%
HYPE $43.95 -2.82%
AAVE $93.06 -5.78%
SUI $1.09 -8.36%
XLM $0.1550 -4.97%
ZEC $516.16 -7.75%

FTX bankruptcy group sues Anthony Scaramucci and SkyBridge Capital to recover over $100 million

2024-11-10 08:14:56
Collection

ChainCatcher news, according to Cointelegraph, the FTX bankruptcy group is seeking to recover over $100 million from SkyBridge Capital and founder Anthony Scaramucci to reclaim funds spent by former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) on sponsorship and investment agreements made with Scaramucci and SkyBridge since 2022.

According to legal documents dated November 8, before FTX's collapse, Bankman-Fried engaged in a series of investments and partnerships with SkyBridge Capital and Scaramucci—first providing a $12 million sponsorship for Scaramucci's SALT conference in January 2022.

Shortly thereafter, in March 2022, SBF directed Alameda Research to invest $10 million in the SkyBridge Coin Fund. Later, in September 2022, FTX acquired a 30% stake in the operating company managing SkyBridge investment vehicles for $45 million. FTX's lawyers argue that this investment lacked financial prudence—believing that "the FTX group could have easily purchased a basket of cryptocurrencies for a significantly lower cost than the majority of the $45 million investment."

app_icon
ChainCatcher Building the Web3 world with innovations.