JEW RAT who stole Billions: The Ghost Of FTX: Bankrupt Exchange Haunts Customers With Phantom Debit Card Deliveries
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White Shop: Tigers in the Mud: The Combat Career of German Panzer Commander Otto Carius
He was physically small and often underestimated, but once he took command of his first Tiger he found his calling and worked his way up the chain of command from a lowly loader to company leader. His exploits on the Ost Front became semi-legendary, but unlike some of his more famous fellow Tiger aces (Wittman, von Strachwitz), he survived to tell the tale first-hand.
[This Jew rat is due to be in court some time this year. As always these Jews are treated far better than they deserve and even when they're caught stealing lots of money they are hardly treated as the criminal scum that they really are. Look at this weird nonsense below. Jan]
Like that ex who just won’t go away, FTX is finding ways to pop up in people’s lives — most recently, through the delivery of its branded debit cards. It’s like the cryptocurrency exchange, which declared bankruptcy in November, is saying, “You thought it was over between us? It’s not over till I say it’s over.”
A delay in processing at card issuer Evolve Bank & Trust is likely to blame for this harmless but ghostly snafu. The website to activate the cards is no longer operational, and the cards themselves don’t work.
This isn’t the first time Memphis-based Evolve Bank & Trust has been involved with a cryptocurrency company that went belly up. The bank also issued cards for BlockFi, an exchange that filed for bankruptcy in November, too.
Following the two bankruptcies, Evolve informed cardholders that their funds were safe, but inaccessible until the bankruptcy cases were resolved.
“This was a clear delay in the customer’s mail service,” an Evolve spokesperson told Forbes. “Card services ceased with FTX’s bankruptcy filing. By law, Evolve is holding onto these balances until the court overseeing the FTX bankruptcy allows us to release these funds back to the customer.”
Reports of the phantom card deliveries came just as FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried was receiving some news of his own. On Tuesday, the U.S. added a charge of conspiring to violate the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act to the laundry list of misdeeds he’s already accused of. Prosecutors allege Bankman-Fried paid $40 million in bribes to Chinese government officials to unfreeze Alameda Research assets held inside the country. He pleaded not guilty in a New York federal court on Thursday.
With the historic nature of FTX’s collapse and the continuing drama of L’Affaire Bankman-Fried, those FTX-branded debit cards will come in handy for something: they’ll make great souvenirs.
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