Alameda wallets resurrect to transfer FTT in the millions

Cryptocurrency

Wallets linked to the bankrupt Alameda Research became active again on Feb. 7, transferring millions worth of FTX Tokens (FTT). The Alameda wallet activity post-FTX bankruptcy filing has been a big concern for the crypto community, with many questioning the merits of the law enforcement agencies and how these wallets are being accessed.

The Alameda wallet address, ‘brokenfish.eth’, transferred nearly $2 million worth of FTT tokens from the BentoBox smart contract on SushiSwap. The smart contract in question serves as the central vault for the entire Sushi ecosystem. Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried has a history with SushiSwap that dates back to 2020 when he took over the protocol from former top developer Chef Nomi.

The “Alameda Research 4” wallet bought more than 1 million FTT (roughly $2.3 million) in the $1.86–$1.87 range. The wallet also opened a loan position on Abracadabra, currently mortgaging 73,000 FTT and $31,000.

Many linked the movement of funds to the ongoing bankruptcy proceedings and believed John Ray III, the court-appointed CEO of FTX, sanctioned the fund movements. Ray III has made no secret of his desire to seize control of the exchange’s assets and those of its subsidiaries to pay off its debts. On Jan. 17, FTX announced that it had discovered over $5.5 billion in liquid assets throughout its investigations, with more than $3 billion owed to its top 50 debtors.

Related: Hodlnaut works with potential buyers to sell firm and FTX claims: Report

This was not the first instance in February that Alameda-linked wallets moved funds. On Feb. 2, Blockchain security firm PeckShield alerted that “Alameda Consolidation” received $13 million worth of crypto assets from three different wallets.

The first is owned by the crypto exchange Bitfinex. It sent approximately 6 million Tether (USDT) and 1,545 Ether (ETH), totaling approximately $8.5 million. The other unidentified individuals transferred approximately $6 million in USD Coin (USDC) to the Alameda Consolidation address.

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