Justice Department Seeks Independent FTX Examiner
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Justice Department Seeks Independent FTX Examiner

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Created 1yr ago, last updated 1yr ago

The U.S. Trustee has asked for the appointment of an independent investigator to represent all stakeholders in the failed crypto exchange, providing a neutral and more credible voice.

Justice Department Seeks Independent FTX Examiner

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The U.S. Department of Justice has asked a Delaware bankruptcy court judge to appoint an independent examiner to investigate the collapse of FTX.

The Dec. 1 filing by the DoJ's Office of the United States Trustee said:

"FTX's approximately one million worldwide creditors, outside investors, and regulators are demanding answers to what happened and how."

And while filing said that it questions neither the "qualifications, competence, or good faith" of the new CEO brought in to oversee the bankruptcy, John Ray III has a fiduciary responsibility to the debtors, a role that comes "with objectives that may not necessarily be aligned with those of all other interested parties."

Comparing FTX to the bankruptcies of Lehman Brothers, Washington Mutual Bank and New Century Financial, the U.S. Trustee said:

"These cases are exactly the kind of cases that require the appointment of an independent fiduciary to investigate and to report on the Debtors' extraordinary collapse."

That is because an independent examiner, however, "would be able to act as a true neutral as to all affected parties" — meaning that it "likely would enjoy broader acceptance and credibility than an examination conducted by any stakeholder in these cases."

Besides that, the filing argued that such acceptance and credibility is especially important in this case, as FTX's collapse may have "wider implications... for the crypto industry."

On top of that, an examiner would be able to investigate the prior management of FTX and its role in the collapse, allowing Ray to focus on stabilizing the roughly 130 companies under the FTX Group umbrella, making a "faster and more cost-effective resolution" possible.

Among other issues, an examiner would be able to investigate whether any "were involved in any of the misfeasance or malfeasance" that may have occurred.

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