Bromley called FTX’s failure “one of the most abrupt and difficult corporate collapses in the history of Corporate America.” He described the network of FTX entities as an international organization “run effectively as a personal fiefdom of Sam Bankman-Fried.”In sifting through the rubble of FTX and its more than 130 affiliated companies, Bromley said that Bankman-Fried’s mismanagement and unreliable record-keeping has left lawyers with an incomplete picture of the companies’ finances.Bromley didn’t specify how much money was stolen or missing, but noted that FTX has been hit with cyber attacks since it began bankruptcy proceedings on November 11.The updated figure underscores what FTX’s new chief executive described last week as a total lack of centralized cash controls under the management of Bankman-Fried.In a filing last week, the CEO, John J. Ray III, said the new management team had been able to only approximate the amount of cash on hand at around $564 million.Another prominent crypto lender, BlockFi, halted withdrawals as FTX unraveled and appeared to be staring down bankruptcy of its own, according to the Wall Street Journal."