Brett Harrison, a former President of FTX U.S., has stated that he intends to release essential information regarding the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange owned by Sam Bankman-Fried “in time.” On Monday, Harrison announced his plans to his followers on Twitter.

It all started when a user on Twitter asked Harrison what he happened to know about FTX.U.S. and when he learned of activities at the organization. Harrison responded to the question by saying, “I’ll share in time,” which led many individuals to assume that the former executive of a crypto exchange will help with investigators in the criminal proceeding against Sam Bankman-Fried.

I’ll share in time

— Brett Harrison (@BrettHarrison88) January 9, 2023

In May of 2021, Brett Harrison became a member of the FTX team and quickly rose through the ranks, eventually becoming President of the American division of the platform. However, Harrison handed in his resignation from his position in September 2022, around two months before Bankman-Fried’s $32 billion empire came crashing down. Harrison held a high-ranking management position with Citadel Securities before joining FTX.

Cital is the biggest authorized market maker on the New York Stock Exchange, and it provides services to more than 50 nations worldwide. Sam Bankman-Fried worked at the same quantitative trading firm as Harrison did, which was called Jane Street. According to the latest reports, Harrison’s most recent business initiative was bootstrapping a software startup for cryptocurrency trading.

Former FTX Executives Face Criminal Charges

After the crypto exchange applied for bankruptcy protection under Chapter 11 in November 2022, numerous investigations into the cause of FTX’s collapse were launched by U.S. government agencies. Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of the corporation, was detained in the Bahamas and promptly extradited to the United States just after arrest.

Bankman-Fried is being investigated for eight separate counts of criminal activity, including money laundering and fraud. According to the allegations made by the prosecutors, he took consumer funds from FTX deliberately in order to bankroll Alameda Research, his trading business that was run by Caroline Ellison.

It is important to note that Ellison is purportedly cooperating with authorities and has confessed to engaging in unlawful activities across Bankman-Fried’s combined empire. According to the reports, co-founder and former Chief Technology Officer Gary Wang also made a plea agreement alongside Ellison.

Niashad Singh, a former lead engineer for FTX, was the subject of an investigation by the prosecutors for his role in the operations of the company. It was alleged in a complaint that was submitted to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) by Singh that he had written code that concealed Alameda’s obligations and liabilities on the crypto exchange.