Gemini Trust Co., the digital-asset exchange founded by the billionaire Winklevoss brothers, filed a lawsuit against Digital Currency Group Inc. and its chief executive officer Barry Silbert, alleging “fraud and deception” stemming from a failed lending venture between the two firms.
(Bloomberg) — Gemini Trust Co., the digital-asset exchange founded by the billionaire Winklevoss brothers, filed a lawsuit against Digital Currency Group Inc. and its chief executive officer Barry Silbert, alleging “fraud and deception” stemming from a failed lending venture between the two firms.
The lawsuit represents the latest salvo in an months-long public dispute between the Winklevoss twins and Silbert over hundreds of millions of dollars in frozen funds related to Genesis Global Holdco, a now-bankrupt DCG subsidiary. The suit was filed in the County of New York Supreme Court on Friday.
Through a program called Earn for individual investors, Gemini had offered hundreds of thousands of customers the ability to earn yields on crypto tokens that were lent through Genesis. When Genesis froze withdrawals in the aftermath of the collapse of FTX in November, it trapped Earn users’ funds and later made Gemini a major creditor in its bankruptcy process.
“From the beginning, Genesis – acting in concert with Defendants and with Defendants’ active support and encouragement – induced the Gemini Earn Lenders to lend by touting Genesis’s purportedly robust risk-management practices and a supposedly thorough vetting process of the counterparties to which it re-lent the assets,” the filing said. “Those were lies.”
Gemini said in the lawsuit that it was seeking to recover “damages and losses” the crypto exchange incurred “as direct result of DCG’s and Silbert’s false, misleading, and incomplete representations and omissions to Gemini.” In May, Gemini had asserted a claim on behalf of Gemini Earn users for more than $1.1 billion.
Silbert declined to comment. A spokesperson for DCG called the lawsuit “a publicity stunt,” adding that “any suggestion of wrongdoing by DCG or any of its employees is baseless, defamatory, and completely false.”
The lawsuit said that Silbert contacted one of the Winklevoss twins in mid-October last year, after Gemini had submitted a 30-day notice to pull out of Earn. Over lunch, Silbert allegedly persuaded Gemini that any troubles Genesis faced would be short-lived, and to continue to support Earn on that basis.
Genesis was struggling financially after facing a major default from crypto fund Three Arrows Capital, which collapsed earlier that summer. Gemini accused Silbert of being fully aware of Genesis’s insolvency, having attempted to fill the balance sheet gap with a 10-year promissory note from DCG instead of liquid capital.
“In reality, as Silbert well knew, Genesis’s problems ran far deeper than a mere ‘timing’ issue,” said Gemini in the filing. “Relying on Silbert’s claims, Gemini elected to delay the termination of the Gemini Earn Program — and not to explore the possibility of pursuing more rapid termination or other relief, as Gemini would have done if Silbert had stated the truth,” it added.
Earn’s implosion dealt a blow to Gemini’s reputation, and some customers with funds stuck in Earn stopped trading on the exchange. The company most recently facilitated less than $30 million in trading volume in the last 24 hours, while the biggest US crypto exchange, Coinbase Global Inc., had about $1.17 billion going through, according to industry data tracker CoinMarketCap.
In early January, Cameron Winklevoss posted an open letter to Silbert on Twitter, accusing him of “bad faith stall tactics” and intermingling of funds within his conglomerate that Winklevoss said left $900 million of customer funds needlessly in limbo. Silbert refuted several of the accusations in a tweet.
Later that month, the US Securities and Exchange Commission sued both Genesis and Gemini for an unregistered offering of securities via the Earn lending program. Genesis filed for bankruptcy several days after the SEC charges.
Settlement negotiations between DCG, Genesis and its creditors including Gemini have continued since. In February, the parties hammered out a preliminary deal, but it was never finalized. In May, the parties entered court-mediated negotiations but have remained far apart. At the same time, DCG said it’s “in discussions with capital providers for growth capital and to refinance its outstanding intercompany obligations with Genesis.” The parent company missed a $630 million payment due to Genesis that month.
Friday’s lawsuit comes after Winklevoss posted another open letter to Silbert earlier this week, containing his “final offer” and a threat to sue, as well as a threat of other actions, if it wasn’t accepted.
(Adds details from the lawsuit, beginning in the second paragraph.)
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