Former Alameda Research co-CEO Sam Trabucco will surrender ownership of two San Francisco apartments worth $8.7 million and a 53-foot yacht and relinquish his $70 million in claims he filed against FTX.
These concessions represent part of a settlement between bankrupt FTX, FTX Digital Markets, and Trabucco, which was submitted on Monday. “Following constructive, arm’s length negotiations, the Debtors, FTX DM, and Trabucco have reached an agreement that delivers significant value for the Debtors’ and FTX DM’s stakeholders without the delay and cost of litigation,” the settlement document said.
Alameda’s co-CEO $70M Claim Against FTX Dismissed
Sam Trabucco, previously close to Sam Bankman-Fried, has agreed to turn over assets, including his yacht, to FTX creditors. Trabucco, who served as co-CEO of Alameda, bought the 53-foot yacht for $2.51 million in March, just months before leaving the Bankman-Fried-led hedge fund. Trabucco will also forfeit two San Francisco apartments he purchased in 2021 for a combined $8.7 million, according to the court filing.
FTX has settled with Trabucco
1) 2 apartments ($8.7m)
2) 53-foot Yacht ($2.5m)
3) Disallowed Customer claims ($70m)
Trabucco received $40m within 2 yrs before petition date pic.twitter.com/56cMDgWB0c
— Sunil (FTX Creditor Champion) (@sunil_trades) November 11, 2024
The firm’s tight ties to FTX came into sharp focus after FTX’s blowup. Trabucco had stepped down as co-CEO this past August, just months before FTX and Alameda blew up. “Just bought a boat,” he’d said when announcing his resignation.
FTX’s Complex Web: Another Piece of the Puzzle
In June 2023, Trabucco filed $70 million in claims against FTX, Alameda Research, and related entities.
According to Monday’s settlement, Trabucco will transfer all rights to his claims, totaling $70 million, to the debtors. His claims will also be disallowed and expunged.
FTX has since filed several bankruptcy lawsuits to claw back cash for its creditors. Recently, it sued Binance and its former CEO Changpeng Zhao for fraud and market manipulation, contending that a 2021 share buyback deal between the companies had been fraudulent and furthered FTX’s distressed financial situation.
FTX Estate also sued other investors, including Anthony Scaramucci’s SkyBridge Capital, to claw back investments it said were ill-advised. The efforts are part of FTX’s plan to maximize creditor recoveries through litigation, not lengthy and costly trials.
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