Maybe they don't need a cooprerating witness or special deals. Apparently the companies were really badly run, with lots of clear-cut violations, making it very easy to file charges.
John J. Ray III, who has taken over for Bankman-Fried as CEO of FTX and whose credentials include supervising the corporate cleanup after Enron imploded, has already said, 'Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here.'
John J. Ray III is a star. The board did right to hire him for the clean-up. I am sure he is cooperating closely with US and Bahamian authorities for criminal evidence gathering. And, he is being paid ~2.6M USD annualised (1,300 USD per hour, 2,000+ hours per year). Seems cheap to clean-up that mess. It might take 5-10 years for full clean-up and wind-down. As the mess is so extensive, I wonder if some board members will also be under investigation. While board member normally have liability insurance, it won't help if crimes were committed.
FTX US had (at least) nine board members. FTX International (non-US entity) was private, as I understand, and essentially unregulated, so who cares about the board.
FTX US is a subsidary of FTX int. The board of FTX US has no power to do anything to parent co or other subsidaries of parent co. FTX US was/is also a private company.
It is a good question. I assume FTX global and/or US has some cash reserves. At the very minimum they have been running a business that needs to pay cash salaries, rent, utilities, etc. Your question is partly answered by the 200K USD retainer" (no details provided). I assume that was paid upfront. He may refuse to continue work if paychecks do not arrive in a timely manner. This guy is very experienced cleaning up bankrupt companies. I'm sure he will get paid, or not work.
One of the problems of these centralized exchanges is that so much stuff happens off-chain. The DEX don't have these problems (some of them have other problems)
One of the major charges though is that they misdirected funds to Alameda Research or had people deposit directly to them instead which would be happening on chain. The failed arbitrage would have also required a lot of on-chain activity.
Indeed. It's emerged that there are screenshots of a signal chat group called (in what must have seemed at the time to be an amusing joke) "Wirefraud" with SBF, the CEO of Alameda (Caroline Ellison) and two of the other top folks from FTX/Alameda.[1] So one of them (probably Ellison as everyone is speculating) almost certainly turned to provide that. That's the sort of off-chain evidence that is somewhat awkward when you're trying to defend (amoung other things) a charge of wire fraud.
Yeah I think they're absolutely hosed here. Beyond anything they did or said before the collapse SBF kept talking and to all appearance lying while trying to get people to reinvest which is a whole new set of possible crimes about misleading investors as well as basically admitting to several crimes.
A great deal of internal communication apparently occurred within ephemeral Signal Chats. While JJRIII is witness to failure, Ellison was witness to intent.
From The Verge article about the arrest of Bankman-Fried ( https://www.theverge.com/2022/12/12/23506483/sam-bankman-fri... ) :
John J. Ray III, who has taken over for Bankman-Fried as CEO of FTX and whose credentials include supervising the corporate cleanup after Enron imploded, has already said, 'Never in my career have I seen such a complete failure of corporate controls and such a complete absence of trustworthy financial information as occurred here.'