IRS demands would take money from FTX victims

U.S. officials will take money away from victims of the fraud-tainted crypto firm, FTX Trading Ltd. unless a judge rejects the government's demand for $24 billion in unpaid taxes, the bankrupt company said in a court filing.

The two sides will be in court Tuesday arguing over the best procedures to determine how much of the Internal Revenue Service claim is legitimate. FTX wants to set a quick schedule to estimate the claim; the IRS has argued that its audit is ongoing, so asking a judge to estimate how much FTX might owe in taxes is inappropriate. 

"This Alice in Wonderland argument has no support in the law," FTX said in its filing.

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Andrey Rudakov/Bloomberg

Going forward with a court-supervised estimation process will show that FTX lost money in the three-years it operated, so it could not possibly owe the IRS any substantial amount, the company said in court papers filed Sunday. And any money that it could be forced to pay would harm victims of FTX, the company said.

Federal officials will eventually amend the $24 billion claim to reclassify at least some as lower-priority, unsecured debt, the U.S. said in court papers. 

"The government is not looking for a windfall, only to determine the correct amount of the tax liabilities," federal lawyers said in the filing.

Last month, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried was convicted of orchestrating a massive fraud that led to the collapse of his FTX exchange. The company filed for bankruptcy last year after Bankman-Fried agreed to turn over control of his empire to restructuring professionals. Since then, the advisers have been tracking down assets and trying to untangle a complex web of debt owed to various creditors, including customers who put cash and crypto on the trading platform.

FTX's administrators have so far recovered about $7 billion in assets, including $3.4 billion of crypto, according to court documents.

The case is FTX Trading Ltd., 22-11068, U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.

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