FTX’s former prime lawyer cooperated with the US in Sam Bankman-Fried case

by Jeremy

Daniel Friedberg, controversial lawyer who served as prime compliance chief at now-defunkt change FTX, has reportedly cooperated with United States’ prosecutors investigating FTX collapse.

Friedberg offered particulars about FTX in a gathering with two dozen investigators maintain by the U.S. Legal professional for the Southern District of New York’s (SDNY) workplace on Nov. 22, Reuters reported.

The assembly included officers from the Justice Division, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the U.S. Securities and Trade Fee, the report notes, citing a supply acquainted with the matter.

On the assembly, Friedberg offered prosecutors along with his data of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s use of buyer funds to finance his unlawful enterprise scheme. He additionally gave particulars of how Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund Alameda Analysis functioned.

The lawyer reportedly expects to be invited as a authorities witness in Bankman-Fried’s October trial. Thus far, Friedberg has not been charged and has not been advised that he’s below prison investigation.

Whereas prepared to assist U.S. authorities get extra particulars in Bankman-Fried’s case, Friedberg himself has taken measures to cover some private data from the general public.

Shortly after FTX collapsed, Friedberg deleted his LinkedIn profile amid stories indicating his involvement with the net poker rip-off UltimateBet. He reportedly served as basic counsel at UltimateBet and performed a job in masking up that agency’s dishonest scandal again in 2008.

Whereas some stories counsel that Friedberg joined FTX in March 2020, Bankman-Fried reportedly claimed that he was FTX’s “authorized advisor from the very starting” in 2019. Friedberg additionally reportedly first represented Bankman-Fried as outdoors counsel on working Alameda in 2017.

Daniel Friedberg’s deleted LinkedIn profile. Supply: Poker Information

In keeping with Reuters’ sources, Friedberg resigned from his place at FTX on Nov. 8, a day after Bankman-Fried disclosed to prime executives that FTX virtually ran out of cash.

Associated: US authorities are seizing $460M in Robinhood shares tied to FTX: Report

As beforehand reported, Bankman-Fried on Jan. 3 pled not responsible to all prison costs associated to the FTX collapse, together with wire fraud, securities fraud and violations of marketing campaign finance legal guidelines. Beforehand, FTX co-founder Gary Wang and former Alameda Analysis CEO Caroline Ellison pleaded responsible to federal fraud costs in December. Each at the moment are cooperating with SDNY and the U.S. Securities and Trade Fee’s investigation into Bankman-Fried.