Trader accidentally sends 2,000 SOL to bankrupt FTX

A former FTX customer made an expensive mistake in October 2023 when he transferred 2,000 SOL (~$64,000 at the time, almost $400,000 today) to an old FTX account, about a year after the company went bankrupt. Unlike you might expect with an attempt to wire traditional funds to a bank account that's been closed, the funds didn't bounce back. Instead, they've been sitting around under control of the FTX bankruptcy estate, requiring the former customer to seek a court order to get his funds back.All in all, this customer is actually pretty lucky as far as erroneous transfers go. FTX's bankruptcy team still has access to FTX wallets, and are still actively working on recovering and disbursing assets to creditors. In some cases in the crypto world, erroneous transfers are lost forever. "FTX User Accidentally Deposited 2,000 Tokens Year After Collapse" , Bloomberg

Feb 12, 2025 - 19:05
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Trader accidentally sends 2,000 SOL to bankrupt FTX
Three horizontal blue bars in a lighter gradient and shorter length from top to bottom, forming an F. To the left of the middle bar is a blue square. Following the shape is "FTX" in black

A former FTX customer made an expensive mistake in October 2023 when he transferred 2,000 SOL (~$64,000 at the time, almost $400,000 today) to an old FTX account, about a year after the company went bankrupt. Unlike you might expect with an attempt to wire traditional funds to a bank account that's been closed, the funds didn't bounce back. Instead, they've been sitting around under control of the FTX bankruptcy estate, requiring the former customer to seek a court order to get his funds back.

All in all, this customer is actually pretty lucky as far as erroneous transfers go. FTX's bankruptcy team still has access to FTX wallets, and are still actively working on recovering and disbursing assets to creditors. In some cases in the crypto world, erroneous transfers are lost forever.