Fallen FTX sues Ryan Salame for $98.8 million over alleged fraud

Fallen FTX sues Ryan Salame for $98.8 million over alleged fraud

The bankrupt FTX exchange has filed a lawsuit against Ryan Salame, the former co-CEO of its Bahamian subsidiary, seeking to recover approximately $98.8 million in cash and crypto, according to a Nov. 4 court filing.

The failed firm accuses Salame of knowingly assisting other executivesā€”most notably, founder Sam Bankman-Friedā€”in breaching fiduciary duties and misappropriating customer assets.

According to FTX:

ā€œDespite Salameā€™s concerted efforts to obscure his receipt and expenditure of misappropriated Debtor assets, it is evident that Salame reaped substantial benefits from his role in ā€˜perpetrating aspects of the interrelated frauds that Bankman-Fried carried out at both companies.’ā€

The exchange contends Salame personally gained from his involvement and received significant compensation between November 2020 and November 2022. FTX alleges that during this period, Salame received $52.9 million in wire transfers, $29.8 million in cash and crypto withdrawals, and over $7.7 million in salary and bonuses.

He reportedly acquired nine million FTT tokens, sold 1.1 million for $24 million, and invested the proceeds in assets like luxury cars, businesses, and a $2.3 million stake in RedBird Capital Partners Fund IV.

The FTX lawsuit also draws attention to Salameā€™s guilty plea. During her unsuccessful Congressional campaign, he admitted to conspiring to make false statements to banks as part of an unlicensed money-transmitting business and making an excessive political donation to his former partner, Michelle Bond.

The exchange continued that Salame misused estate funds by withdrawing $5 million from his FTX.com account on Nov. 7, 2022. These funds, they allege, went toward personal expenses, including a public relations firm and a $20,000 personal charge at Restoration Hardware.

FTX has asked the court to disallow Salameā€™s claims in the exchangeā€™s Chapter 11 proceedings until he returns all assets acquired through these transfers. This includes cash, crypto, and real estate spanning multiple locationsā€”Connecticut, Miami, Portugal, Hong Kong, and Baliā€”obtained with the allegedly misappropriated funds.

In October, Salame began a 90-month prison sentence following his guilty plea to conspiracy charges related to illegal political contributions and fraud against the Federal Election Commission. Alongside his prison term, Salame agreed to forfeit $1.5 billion.

Additionally, he received a three-year supervised release order and must pay over $6 million in forfeiture and $5 million in restitution.

The post Fallen FTX sues Ryan Salame for $98.8 million over alleged fraud appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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