The post FTX Bankruptcy Lawsuit Targets Genesis Digital Assets in $1 Billion Clawback appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
The long-running FTX bankruptcy case has entered a new chapter. The FTX Recovery Trust is now suing crypto mining company Genesis Digital Assets (GDA) in an effort to claw back more than $1 billion. The lawsuit highlights how deeply Sam Bankman-Fried’s financial decisions continue to impact creditors two years after FTX’s collapse.
Filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, the complaint alleges that Sam Bankman-Fried directed Alameda Research, FTX’s sister trading firm, to funnel customer funds into GDA at inflated prices.
According to the filing, between 2021 and 2022, Alameda:
The lawsuit argues these deals were not just reckless but deliberately structured to benefit Bankman-Fried personally. Since he owned 90% of Alameda, he would “capture nearly all the upside from GDA’s inflated valuation while shifting the financial risks onto FTX customers and creditors,” the complaint states.
The FTX Recovery Trust lawsuit also highlights that Bankman-Fried disregarded significant warning signs. At the time of the investment, Kazakhstan—where GDA was based—was experiencing a severe energy crisis, raising concerns about the company’s future operations.
The filing claims Bankman-Fried relied on financial statements that “bore no relation to reality,” showing what the trust describes as mismanagement and disregard for customer funds.
“These were commingled and misappropriated funds,” the lawsuit says, framing the GDA deals as another chapter in Bankman-Fried’s broader fraud.
This lawsuit is just one part of ongoing recovery efforts. In 2023, a U.S. bankruptcy court approved a $175 million settlement with Genesis Global Trading, a separate entity from GDA.
Meanwhile, the restructuring team has been working to return money to FTX customers and creditors. So far, the trust has distributed:
Each successful clawback brings creditors closer to recovering lost funds, though the process remains long and litigious.
Sam Bankman-Fried is already serving time for fraud, but the FTX bankruptcy litigation shows the ripple effects of his decisions continue. The GDA lawsuit underscores the scale of alleged mismanagement and the difficult task of untangling the exchange’s financial web.
For creditors, the hope is clear that every lawsuit and settlement is one step closer to recovering billions lost in the FTX collapse.
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The FTX Recovery Trust is suing to claw back over $1 billion that Sam Bankman-Fried allegedly funneled into Genesis Digital Assets at inflated prices, using FTX customer funds.
The lawsuit claims Sam Bankman-Fried used customer funds to buy GDA shares at inflated prices and wired over $550 million directly to its founders, ignoring financial red flags.
Each successful lawsuit, like this one against GDA, helps recover funds. The money is then distributed to creditors, bringing them closer to recovering their lost investments.
“Clawback” lawsuits are legal actions taken to recover funds that were improperly or fraudulently transferred out of FTX before its collapse, so they can be returned to creditors.