James Bromley, a partner at law firm Sullivan & Cromwell representing debtors in FTX’s bankruptcy case in the District of Delaware, has said that assets at the firm continue to be at risk from cyberattacks.
In a livestream of FTX Trading’s bankruptcy proceedings on Nov. 22, Bromley said new FTX CEO John Ray III had laid out core objections aimed at getting the firm, remaining employees and funds through the controversial and public collapse. According to the FTX co-counsel, a core group of employees has continued to work at the exchange to ensure assets are secure and records maintained, but hackers have posed a threat since Nov. 11 when the company filed for Chapter 11.