I’m curious about this as well. Does leaving immediately not impede the chances of getting a better (I’d never dare say “full”) picture of what went down? Additionally, in terms of accountability, I guess now we’ll never know or have records of (from emails etc.) who knew what and when.
I don’t think staying on would add to what the insolvency trustee, regulatory authorities, and likely criminal prosecutors will uncover. The court has already appointed a liquidation trustee whose mission is preserving assets and does not include working with EA. Its unclear to me whether the trustee is in control of the FTX Foundation now, but the statement did say related entities. The FTX principals are doubtless preoccupied and are presumably attuned enough to legal exposure to not be having unnecessary conversations.
I’m curious about this as well. Does leaving immediately not impede the chances of getting a better (I’d never dare say “full”) picture of what went down? Additionally, in terms of accountability, I guess now we’ll never know or have records of (from emails etc.) who knew what and when.
I don’t think staying on would add to what the insolvency trustee, regulatory authorities, and likely criminal prosecutors will uncover. The court has already appointed a liquidation trustee whose mission is preserving assets and does not include working with EA. Its unclear to me whether the trustee is in control of the FTX Foundation now, but the statement did say related entities. The FTX principals are doubtless preoccupied and are presumably attuned enough to legal exposure to not be having unnecessary conversations.