Scan to download
BTC $76,996.46 +0.23%
ETH $2,314.46 +1.12%
BNB $625.65 +0.12%
XRP $1.39 -0.20%
SOL $84.64 +0.71%
TRX $0.3219 -0.68%
DOGE $0.1013 +1.73%
ADA $0.2489 +0.60%
BCH $453.85 +1.33%
LINK $9.31 +0.26%
HYPE $40.28 -1.94%
AAVE $97.41 +0.60%
SUI $0.9308 +0.07%
XLM $0.1627 -1.63%
ZEC $335.84 -3.01%
BTC $76,996.46 +0.23%
ETH $2,314.46 +1.12%
BNB $625.65 +0.12%
XRP $1.39 -0.20%
SOL $84.64 +0.71%
TRX $0.3219 -0.68%
DOGE $0.1013 +1.73%
ADA $0.2489 +0.60%
BCH $453.85 +1.33%
LINK $9.31 +0.26%
HYPE $40.28 -1.94%
AAVE $97.41 +0.60%
SUI $0.9308 +0.07%
XLM $0.1627 -1.63%
ZEC $335.84 -3.01%

The law firms and special advisors handling the FTX bankruptcy case charged a total of $38 million in fees in January

2023-03-07 15:06:46
Collection

According to ChainCatcher news, court documents show that the law firms Sullivan & Cromwell, litigation special counsel Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, and Landis Rath & Cobb, along with consulting firm AlixPartners (which conducted forensic analysis on FTX's DeFi products and tokens), collectively charged $38 million in January for handling the FTX bankruptcy case.

Among them, Sullivan & Cromwell was responsible for asset discovery, disposal, analysis, and recovery, with fees amounting to $16.8 million in January (14,569 hours); Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan charged $1.4 million, and Landis Rath & Cobb charged $663,995. These three law firms had over 180 attorneys working on the case, along with more than 50 non-attorney staff (such as paralegals). (source link)

app_icon
ChainCatcher Building the Web3 world with innovations.