Binance has filed a motion to dismiss a $1.76 billion lawsuit brought by the FTX estate, accusing the defunct crypto exchange of trying to deflect blame for its own failure.
Filed on May 16 in the Delaware Bankruptcy Court, Binanceâs legal team called the suit âlegally deficient,â stating that FTXâs collapse was not triggered by market manipulation or hostile action but by internal misconduct.
âPlaintiffs are pretending that FTX did not collapse as the result of one of the most massive corporate frauds in history,â the filing said, pointing to Sam âSBFâ Bankman-Friedâs conviction on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy.
FTXâs estate alleges that Binance received billions in crypto during a 2021 buyback deal, funded improperly with customer assets.
Binance rejects this claim, stating that âFTX remained a going concern for 16 monthsâ after the share repurchase and that there was âno plausible claimâ the exchange was insolvent at the time.
Related: Binance wants arbitration for all members of securities class suit
Zhaoâs tweet and FTT crash
The lawsuit also accuses former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao of triggering a collapse through a tweet on Nov. 6, 2022 announcing the liquidation of FTT tokens.
In response, Binance argued that Zhaoâs tweet was based on publicly known concerns. âBinanceâs decision to liquidate its remaining FTT was, in fact, âdue to recent revelations ââ in particular, the Nov. 2, 2022, CoinDesk articleâ that exposed Alameda Researchâs balance sheet.
The company further defended Zhaoâs comment that Binance would aim to minimize market impact. âThe Complaint contains no such factsâ to prove Binance had no intention of following through.
In challenging the courtâs jurisdiction, Binance said none of the foreign entities named âare incorporated in or maintain their principal place of business in the United States,â and thus fall outside the courtâs reach.
The filing also criticizes the plaintiffâs narrative as âa grab bag of state law claimsâ based on âpure conjecture â much of it sourced from a convicted fraudsterâs hindsight speculation.â
Binance has asked the court to dismiss all claims with prejudice. The FTX estate has not yet filed its response.
Related:Â FTX EU creditors can now withdraw money from Backpack exchange
FTX to disburse $5 billion in second round of creditor repayments
FTX is set to begin its second round of repayments to creditors more than two years after filing for bankruptcy.
In a May 15 notice, the FTX Recovery Trust announced that over $5 billion will be distributed starting May 30 through BitGo and Kraken, targeting parties in the second eligible group under the exchangeâs reorganization plan.
According to the plan, five creditor groups categorized as âconvenience classesâ are expected to receive between 54% and 120% of their claims. In total, FTX may repay up to $16 billion, depending on the final number of valid claims.
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