The FTX Bankruptcy Trust has filed a $1.15 billion lawsuit against Bitcoin mining firm Genesis Digital Assets, marking one of the largest clawback actions yet in the ongoing efforts to recover assets lost in the collapse of the FTX exchange.
The complaint alleges that Genesis Digital and its co-founders received more than $1 billion in fraudulent transfers from Sam Bankman-Friedâs Alameda Research between 2021 and 2022.Â
âGreat detrimentâ to FTX customersÂ
The investments, the trust argues, were made at âoutrageously inflated pricesâ and provided little to no value to FTXâs business, which was already insolvent at the time.
âBetween August 2021 and April 2022, Bankman-Fried caused Alameda to Purchase several tranches of shares in GDA, a Bitcoin mining firm, at outrageously inflated prices,â the filing read. âWhile FTX Group funds were used to purchase the shares, only Alamedaâand, in turn, Bankman-Fried, Alamedaâs 90% ownerâwas to receive any benefit, to the great detriment of customers and other creditors of FTX.comâ
Under U.S. bankruptcy law, the trust is empowered to pursue âavoidance actionsâ â lawsuits designed to claw back funds that were improperly transferred before a company filed for bankruptcy.Â
The size of this suit underscores the scale of FTXâs asset recovery campaign, which has become one of the largest and most complex in U.S. bankruptcy history following the exchangeâs 2022 collapse.
According to the filing, most of the funds came from customer deposits on FTX.com that were funneled into Alameda Research and then redirected into Genesis Digital.Â
The trust claims the mining companyâs co-founders, Rashit Makhat and Marco Krohn, personally benefited, selling more than $550 million worth of their own shares to Alameda in the process.
The lawsuit describes Genesis Digital as a politically connected miner in Kazakhstan that took advantage of cheap energy and favorable treatment under the countryâs former president, Nursultan Nazarbayev. But by late 2021, Kazakhstanâs power grid was under strain from an influx of miners, and new taxes, blackouts, and social unrest destabilized the industry.Â
The complaint alleges that despite these clear risks â as well as unaudited financials, money laundering concerns, and a lack of interest from other investors â Bankman-Fried pressed ahead with outsized investments, according to Bloomberg reporting.Â
âGenesis Digital stands as one of Bankman-Friedâs most reckless investments with commingled and misappropriated funds,â the trust said in its filing.
The case comes as Bankman-Fried serves a 25-year prison sentence after being convicted on seven criminal counts, including fraud and conspiracy, tied to FTXâs downfall.Â