Tech

Ex-FTX lawyer Dan Friedberg was SBF’s ‘fixer,’ paid ‘hush money’ to whistleblowers: lawsuit

Former FTX “chief regulatory officer” Dan Friedberg allegedly helped to steal billions of dollars in customer funds at the cryptocurrency platform while serving as a personal “fixer” for disgraced founder Sam Bankman-Fried, according to a bombshell lawsuit.

In the lawsuit filed Tuesday in Delaware bankruptcy court, FTX’s current caretakers alleged that Friedberg – a lawyer with ties to the notorious UltimateBet online poker cheating scandal – helped Bankman-Fried in the “wholesale raiding of customer exchange deposits.”

Friedberg was allegedly involved in “whitewashing complaints by whistleblowers” about misuse of those funds – at one point paying “exorbitant hush money” to an unnamed former FTX employee who raised alarms, the suit alleged.

“With regard to multiple whistleblower complaints alleging corporate malfeasance, Friedberg served as Bankman-Fried’s fixer,” the complaint said. “He not only settled the complaints for inflated amounts, in some instances he arranged for the FTX Group to retain the whistleblowers’ attorneys post-settlement, thereby buying or otherwise ensuring their silence.”

Friedberg held top compliance roles at FTX while also serving as the general counsel at Alameda Research – the doomed cryptocurrency hedge fund run by Bankman-Fried’s ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison.

Daniel Friedberg allegedly “whitewashed” complaints from employees raising concerns about the activities of FTX and Alameda by settling claims for “inflated” amounts FTX

Bankman-Fried is alleged to have stolen billions in FTX customer funds to prop up risky bets at Alameda, buy up ritzy real estate and make significant political donations. He has pleaded not guilty and is set to face trial in Manhattan federal court on various charges this fall.

In the bankruptcy court filing, FTX officials alleged that Friedberg “personally received millions of dollars in unjustified bonuses and other compensation” while working at the company.

Friedberg was purportedly “rewarded for his 22 months of ‘service at Alameda and the FTX US exchange” with a windfall that included “cryptocurrency worth tens of millions of dollars, as well as handsome monetary compensation and a bonus in excess of $3 million.”

FTX is seeking to claw back the money.

“Plaintiffs seek to recover damages caused by breaches of Friedberg’s fiduciary duties, legal malpractice, and other wrongdoing, and to recover all amounts fraudulently transferred to Friedberg, including any cryptocurrency, bonuses, and any other things of value,” the suit said.

Sam Bankman-Fried has been criminally charged in federal court in Manhattan with stealing billions in FTX customer funds. AP

The lawsuit alleged that Joe Bankman, Bankman-Fried’s father and a Stanford law professor, had personally vouched for Friedberg and urged his son to give him a “central role” at FTX.

Bankman told his son to “keep Friedberg ‘in the loop…so we have one person on top of everything,’” according to the suit.

An attorney for Friedberg and a representative for Bankman-Fried did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit.

In a filing earlier this week, FTX officials mentioned a “senior FTX Group attorney” who had “actively facilitated and covered up the FTX Group’s commingling of customer and corporate funds.”

That filing did not mention Friedberg by name, but the Wall Street Journal reported he was the attorney being referenced.

The previous filing detailed one episode in which the unnamed “attorney-1” had given a $1 million “bonus” to a former Bahamian government official in order to “procure a necessary business license for FTX DM within ten weeks.”

Dan Friedberg has links to the infamous UltimateBet poker cheating scandal.

Friedberg has faced intense scrutiny since FTX’s stunning collapse into bankruptcy last November.

As The Post reported at the time, Friedberg formerly served as attorney for UltimateBet, a once-popular online poker platform that crumbled in the 2000s following revelations that some insiders had access to an exploit dubbed “God Mode” that allowed them to see players’ hidden cards.

The scheme ensnared prominent victims, including actor Ben Affleck, and bilked players out of tens of millions of dollars before UltimateBet eventually shut down.

In leaked audio published in 2013 and still widely available online, Friedberg coached UltimateBet executives on how to downplay the situation and minimize restitution payments to victims. Friedberg later told NBC News that the meeting was illegally recorded, but did not dispute its authenticity.

Friedberg was never charged with a crime for his work with UltimateBet and there is no indication he was ever investigated by authorities or regulators.

Friedberg has not faced any criminal charges for his work at FTX. In January, Reuters reported that he had flipped on Bankman-Fried and had been cooperating with the feds as they investigated the company’s downfall.

Within days of FTX’s bankruptcy last November, Friedberg reportedly told FBI agents in an email that he wanted “to cooperate in all respects.”

Ellison and at least two other former FTX executives, Nishad Singh and Gary Wang, are also cooperating with authorities.