Gemini’s Winklevoss twins accuse Barry Silbert of ‘bad faith’

The Winklevoss twins and their troubled cryptocurrency site Gemini accused the boss of key lending partner Genesis of “bad faith stall tactics” this week as $900 million in customer funds remain in limbo.

Gemini co-founder Cameron Winklevoss penned a scathing open letter to Digital Currency Group CEO Barry Silbert, whose firm counts Genesis as a subsidiary.

Winklevoss claimed that Silbert has resisted calls for Genesis to repay money tied to the interest-bearing account program known as “Gemini Earn.”

“For the past six weeks, we have done everything we can to engage with you in a good faith and collaborative manner in order to reach a consensual resolution for you to pay back the $900 million that you owe, while helping your preserve your business,” Winklevoss said in the letter.

“We appreciate that there are startup costs to any restructuring, and at times things don’t go as fast as we would all like,” the letter added. “However, it is now becoming clear that you have been engaging in bad faith stall tactics.”

Genesis originally halted withdrawals in November after it faced a cash crunch due to what it described as “unprecedented market turmoil” related to FTX’s downfall. Genesis was the key lending partner for “Earn” accounts, forcing Gemini to take a similar step of pausing withdrawals and leaving customers in the lurch.


Cameron Winklevoss
Cameron Winklevoss is co-founder of Gemini.
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Winklevoss alleged that Silbert’s DCG owes its subsidiary Genesis a total of approximately $1.675 billion – money that would ultimately be used to pay back “Earn users and other creditors.”

The brewing spat is the latest sign of controversy for the Winklevoss twins, Cameron and Tyler, who became cryptocurrency kingpins after previously being best known for their legal war with Mark Zuckerberg over the founding of Facebook.

SIlbert fired back at Winklevoss’ open letter with a tweet of his own.


Winklevoss twins
The Winklevoss twins are best known for their feud with Mark Zuckerberg.
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“DCG did not borrow $1.675 billion from Genesis,” Silbert said. “DCG has never missed an interest payment to Genesis and is current on all loans outstanding; next loan maturity is May 2023. DCG delivered to Genesis and your advisors a proposal on December 29th and has not received any response.”

“There you go again,” Winklevoss replied. “Stop trying to pretend that you and DCG are innocent bystanders and had nothing to do with creating this mess. It’s completely disingenuous. So how does DCG owe Genesis $1.675 billion if it didn’t borrow the money? Oh right, that promissory note…”

The Post has reached out to Gemini and Silbert’s DCG for further comment on the situation.


Winklevoss twins
Gemini owes customers of its “Earn” program $900 million.
Getty Images

The “Gemini Earn” program was marketed as a way for customers to earn money on cryptocurrency holdings, with an annual interest rate of up to 8%. At present, it’s unclear if or when those customers will be able to recover their frozen digital currencies tied up in the program.

As The Post reported last week, a pair of Gemini customers slapped the site and the Winklevoss twins with a class-action lawsuit. The complaint accused the twins of selling the interest-bearing accounts to customers without properly registering them as securities or fully alerting participants to the potential risks.

Gemini “refused to honor any further investor redemptions, effectively wiping out all investors who still had holdings in the program,” the lawsuit said.