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Interview: Synapse's Ex-CEO Says He Has A Plan To Get Depositors Their Money Back
Description
With the Synapse bankruptcy case seemingly nearing some kind of conclusion, impacted end users are left wondering, will they ever get their money back?
While, at this point, Synapse cofounder and former CEO Sankaet Pathak can’t really answer that question, he is able to provide greater context on what happened and why.
In this podcast, recorded as a X (formerly Twitter) livestream yesterday, November 11th, I had the chance to interview Pathak and impacted depositors had an opportunity to ask him questions directly.
Key takeaways I had from the conversation include:
* Pathak revealed that Evolve had sent him a cease and desist as a result of him posting what he says is an anonymized version of the trial balance report of the funds Evolve held for end users.
* A description of the process by which Evolve prepared and sent files to Synapse for reconciliation, including a possible reason why balances between Evolve’s systems and Synapse’s appeared to varied substantially day to day, and Evolve’s claim that this wasn’t something to worry about, Pathak said.
* Pathak said that Evolve was aware of and acknowledged that fees owed to Tabapay were improperly debited from customer funds, but that Evolve disputed whether it was the bank’s fault.
* Synapse didn’t want Synapse Brokerage to contract with Evolve or keep the Brokerage’s funds at Evolve due to the known shortfalls, Pathak said.
* The plan with the Brokerage structure, per Pathak, was that incoming funds would land in users’ DDA accounts at Evolve, a portion of those funds that users would transact with would stay at Evolve, and the rest would be swept out to AMG. However, Pathak says, in late September or early October 2023, Evolve, without explanation why, ceased processing sweeps out of Evolve to AMG.
* Pathak described how Evolve’s reversal of position on funding the FBO shortfalls led to the collapse of the deal for Tabapay to acquire Synapse’s assets and, ultimately, the collapse of the company and freeze of end user funds.
* Pathak acknowledged taking two loans from the company, one in late 2023 and one in early 2024, which totaled $320,000. The transactions, Pathak said, were approved by the Synapse board — though, at the time, the board consisted of Pathak himself, a seed round investor that, and a Synapse cofounder. While Pathak didn’t name specific individuals, per filings in the bankruptcy case, the seed investor is Doug Marchant and the Synapse cofounder is Hilary Quirk. Pathak declined to elaborate on the purpose of the loans, besides saying he had “good reasons” to do it, which would “become obvious” relatively soon.
* Full reconciliation should be possible, Pathak said, but it would require the right data, resources, people, and time.
* Pathak acknowledged anonymously leaking a letter that Synapse had sent to Evolve to me (which I suspected at the time but didn’t know until now.)
* According to Pathak, Synapse’s board of directors, which, at points, included Andreessen Horowitz’s Angela Strange, Trinity Venture’s Schwark Satyavolu, and Core Innovation Capital’s Arjan Schütte, was broadly aware of the issues Synapse faced, that they were “trying to do the right thing,” and that the board ask Pathak “not to shut down and escalate.”
* While Chapter 11 trustee McWilliams and Judge Martin Barash have made numerous references to not being able to confirm or deny if they have made any referrals to law enforcement, Pathak said that he is not aware of any criminal investigation and has not been contacted by law enforcement authorities, though he did ackno