The 30-year-old is at the center of a huge cryptocurrency controversy, after it was revealed that his crypto exchange had been "funneling money to a sister trading company run by his girlfriend," according to The New York Post.
Now, American and Bahamian authorities are discussing the potential extradition of Bankman-Fried to the US for questioning, according to a Bloomberg report.
Three people who are reportedly familiar with the matter told the outlet that conversations between the two countries' authorities have intensified in recent days, as they investigate his role in FTX's collapse. According to one anonymous inside source, Bankman-Fried is being cooperative with the Bahamian officials.
Bankman-Fried, who resigned from his CEO position, apologized to customers on Twitter after losing billions in their money. His own net worth was estimated to be $16 billion before the disaster, but according to the Daily Mail, his fortune has taken a dive by 94 percent.
"My goal—my one goal—is to do right by customers," the major Democrat donor wrote. "I'm contributing what I can to doing so."
According to the former billionaire, he's "meeting in-person with regulators and working with the teams to do what we can for customers."
"And after that, investors. But first, customers," he added.
As of last Friday, FTX has been in bankruptcy proceedings in the US courts, and other crypto firms are expected to follow.
Crypto lender BlockFi, which is financially entangled with FTX, is planning to lay off workers and is considering filing for bankruptcy itself, reported Wall Street Journal on Tuesday.
On Saturday, Bankman-Fried was seen in the Bahamas, where FTX is based.
"A source said the disgraced CEO and his father were spotted hunkering down with cops and federal regulators Saturday," reported The Post.
So far, no one has been arrested in connection to the lost money.
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