Former FTX chief lawyer claims US legal counsel channeled business to S&C

Published at: Jan. 20, 2023

A former FTX chief lawyer has accused the company's US general counsel of channeling business to Sullivan & Cromwell (S&C) — the firm currently serving FTX as bankruptcy counsel.

Daniel Friedberg, who was the chief regulatory officer of FTX until he resigned on Nov. 8, made the allegations as part of a Jan 19. court filing.

The filing was a declaration in support of an FTX creditor’s objection to FTX’s plan to continue using S&C as its lawyers throughout its bankruptcy case.

In the declaration, Friedberg alleges that FTX.US lead counsel Ryne Miller, a former partner at S&C channeled business towards his former law firm across numerous cases, with Friedberg stating:

“Mr. Miller informed me that it was very important for him personally to channel a lot of business to S&C as he wanted to return there as a partner after his stint at the Debtors.”

Friedberg claims in the filing that he reminded Miller that his “allegiance” was to the debtor and not to S&C which he suggested “continued to be a problem throughout his work” at FTX.

Friedberg alleged after Miller's hiring in early 2020, Miller asked whether he could hire his former law firm, to which Friedberg replied by saying it was Miller's job “to only hire the best outside counsel for the job.”

Miller ended up engaging S&C to be primary counsel for FTX.US, FTX Derivatives (formerly LedgerX), and Sam Bankman-Fried’s holding company Emergent, wrote Friedberg.

He noted that S&C has also acted as personal counsel to Bankman-Fried and another key FTX executive, Nishad Singh.

Related: FTX CEO says he is exploring rebooting the exchange: Report

While the filing is simply a declaration in support of an FTX creditors objection to the retention of FTX lawyers Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, it makes a number of accusations which were previously undisclosed.

Well, I just finished reading the Declaration of Daniel Friedberg. It is fair to say that this is one of the more shocking sworn statements I have read in a good long while.If half of what Mr. Friedberg says is true, he has just blown the top off of this bankruptcy case.

— MetaLawMan (@MetaLawMan) January 19, 2023
Tags
Ftx
Related Posts
FTX resumes employee and contractor payments after weeks in limbo
Bankrupt crypto exchange FTX has announced it will be “resuming ordinary” cash payments, salaries and benefits to its remaining employees around the world. The announcement came from new FTX CEO John Ray III on Nov. 28, as the insolvency professional looks to help FTX and its approximated 101 affiliated companies (FTX Debtors) navigate their way through the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware. "With the Court's approval of our First Day motions and the work being done on global cash management, I am pleased that the FTX group is resuming ordinary course cash payments of salaries and benefits to our remaining …
Blockchain / Nov. 29, 2022
7 class action lawsuits have been filed against SBF so far, records show
The number of lawsuits against former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried has been racking up since the fall of his crypto empire, with the former “white knight” of crypto finding himself a defendant in seven class action lawsuits filed since FTX’s bankruptcy. These lawsuits are separate from the numerous probes and investigations examining FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried, such as a reported market manipulation probe by federal prosecutors and the Federal Election Commission’s likely investigation into Bankman-Frieds dark money donations to the Republican Party. Below is a summary of the class-action lawsuits brought against Sam Bankman-Fried since Nov. 11. Dec. 7: Podalsky …
Regulation / Dec. 9, 2022
FTX Bahamas co-CEO Ryan Salame blew the whistle on FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried
According to Bahamian court records filed on Dec. 14, Ryan Salame, the former co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets told the Securities Commission of the Bahamas (SCB) on Nov. 9 that FTX was sending customer funds to its sister trading firm Alameda Research. He also told the SCB only three people had the access required to transfer client assets to Alameda: Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX co-founder Zixiao “Gary” Wang and FTX engineer Nishad Singh. The allegation spurred SCB executive director Christina Rolle to contact the commissioner of the Royal Bahamas Police Force to request an investigation. Related: Realized losses …
Regulation / Dec. 15, 2022
FTX customers are safe from being doxxed, for now
The names of up to nine million FTX customers are set to remain confidential for at least three more months following the latest ruling in FTX bankruptcy proceedings. The decision was reportedly made by Judge John Dorsey in the Delaware-based bankruptcy court on Jan. 11 in response to a 168-page filing by FTX on Jan. 8 which requested the court to withhold confidential customer information. Judge Dorsey said that he remains “reluctant at this point” to disclose the confidential information, as it may put creditors “at risk,” despite increased pressure from several media outlets: "We're talking about individuals here who …
Regulation / Jan. 12, 2023
Sequoia Capital, Paradigm among VCs facing "tricky" FTX investor lawsuit
Users of bankrupt crypto exchange FTX have reportedly taken aim at financiers who promoted the platform suggesting their efforts added an “air of legitimacy” to the now-defunct exchange, a case labeled as "tricky" by a crypto lawyer. A Feb. 15 Bloomberg report revealed a class-action suit filed Feb. 14 by FTX investors against venture capital firm Sequoia Capital and private equity firms Thoma Bravo and Paradigm. The firms were accused by the investors of touting “their own investments” of hundreds of millions of dollars in FTX. It was alleged the firms were involved in a promotional marketing campaign in 2021 …
Regulation / Feb. 15, 2023