Williams sonoma bankruptcy

All things Williams-Sonoma

2015.09.30 07:06 bmessina All things Williams-Sonoma

[link]


2015.02.21 07:28 antiSeptics HOME FURNISHINGS, HOME DECOR, OUTDOOR FURNITURE & MODERN FURNITURE

POTTERY BARN'S EXPERTLY CRAFTED COLLECTIONS OFFER A WIDE-RANGE OF STYLISH INDOOR AND OUTDOOR FURNITURE ACCESSORIES DECOR AND MORE FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME
[link]


2024.05.16 03:44 BROXAHFAREWELL Le Creuset Casserole Dish (Azure Color), 3-Pack of Carbone Marinara Sauces, Carbone Parmesan Grater, a Meat Tenderizer, a recipe card, a Seghesio Hadley & Bennet Apron, one (1) $100 Seghesio Gift Card, and one (1) Williams Sonoma Classic Logo Towel {US} (06/30/2024)

submitted by BROXAHFAREWELL to giveaways [link] [comments]


2024.05.16 00:03 polloponzi An Exclusive Prison Chat With Sam Bankman-Fried

For the first time since his incarceration, Bankman-Fried described his daily life in a detailed interview with journalist William D. Cohan of Puck:

On a recent Tuesday, I went to the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn for an intimate chat with America’s most famous prisoner, Sam Bankman-Fried. During our 75-minute conversation, we discussed everything from Caroline Ellison and the travails of his new life, to his regrets about the demise of FTX and his forthcoming appeal.
I got the distinct impression that Sam still doesn’t believe he committed any crimes, only that he was the one responsible for putting FTX in a position where it was vulnerable to a bank run and the devious actions of its competitors
WILLIAM D. COHAN -- May 9, 2024
On Tuesday afternoon, I found myself in the most unusual circumstances—sitting on a small plastic chair at a cramped table in the Metropolitan Detention Center, the federal prison on 29th Street in Sunset Park, in Deep Brooklyn. Outside, it was a gorgeous day, the sort of picturesque and slightly humid one that inevitably reminds longtime New Yorkers of the weather on the morning of September 11th. Inside the prison’s visiting room, however, there was no natural light, no sunshine, only the Hitchcockian buzz of fluorescent bulbs and three vending machines standing in a corner. Posters on the wall attempted to compensate for the bleak atmosphere by buoyantly welcoming visiting families.
I first met Sam Bankman-Fried in December 2021, during the height of his power and influence, when he was the richest person in the world under 30. My friend Anthony Scaramucci, a.k.a. The Mooch, had connected us. On a cold winter night at the One Hotel, on Sixth Avenue, I interviewed him for a documentary I am part of making about Bitcoin and its developer, Satoshi Nakamato. Sam showed up an hour late, in a black t-shirt and cargo shorts, apparently having just flown in via private jet from the Bahamas. A month later, Sam’s cryptocurrency exchange, FTX, would raise its final $400 million round of financing from a group of highfalutin investors—led by Softbank, Temasek, and Paradigm—at a valuation of $32 billion, making the company one of the most valuable in the sector. At that moment, Sam was said to be worth $26 billion.
This week, we reconnected amid very different circumstances. Sam and I arranged for this visit through his Corrlinks email account, at the suggestion of his mother, Barbara Fried, and the family’s prison advisor. We met on Tuesday around 1 p.m. because that was the only day that visiting hours are permitted at MDC, a hangover from the Covid era. Prisoners can have visitors for one of two sessions, either starting at noon or at five in the afternoon.
We were meeting later than noon because of the staffing shortage at the facility. I was allowed to bring in $1 or $5 bills, up to a total of $30, in case I wanted to buy Sam some water, soda, or snacks from the humming vending machines. I was told to put my $20 bill as well as my wallet and iPhone into a locker. Sam was not permitted to buy anything himself.
Following about an hour of bureaucratic snafus (I went to the wrong building at first, and I wasn’t wearing dark pants—although an exception was made for me) and other forms of prison processing (shoes and belt off, metal detection, sticking my hand in a scanner) I was finally allowed inside the prison, without a phone, a watch, a recording device, or even a pad of paper and a pencil. (I knew this in advance, of course, and set about preserving my recollections of our conversation immediately after leaving the facility.)
After a few minutes of waiting, I looked up to see Sam Bankman-Fried, over in the corner, dressed head to toe in a chocolate-brown prison jumpsuit, along with the still-wild frizzy hair that has been his trademark. These days, Sam looks considerably thinner than the last time we met—it appeared he’d lost 25 pounds, at least. But he looked better and fitter than I thought he would, to be honest—less pudgy, less manic, less fidgety, no bags under his eyes.
He was sustaining himself on rice and beans, he said, because the prison food was unsurprisingly inedible, especially the vegan entrées he was served, which his fellow inmates thought literally smelled like shit. He wasn’t complaining, mind you; he noted that he was just trying to make the best of a bad situation. The rice he buys at the prison commissary has become one of the currencies of the realm inside MDC. We joked briefly about how the arbitrage opportunities in jail were better than anything he experienced trading crypto at Jane Street Capital or buying and selling assets at Alameda. He looked me in the eye pretty much the whole time, something he rarely did with people in the old days.
After we shook hands, he sat down in his own plastic chair as a camera watched us from the ceiling. We were surrounded by a couple of other inmates, dressed similarly, facing their visitors. Sam declined my initial offer to buy him some snacks but ultimately agreed to a $4 bottle of water and a small $2 package of Wheat Thins, which he eagerly consumed.
We talked for the next 75 minutes or so, the first in-person interview he has given to a journalist since he was locked up in the MDC last August and then subsequently convicted of two counts of wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, securities fraud, commodities fraud, and money-laundering at his federal trial in November. In March, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. Our chat, under these rather drastic circumstances, was a profoundly jarring and fascinating experience.

Prison Diaries

Sam began by answering my question about his life in prison. According to him, he lives in an area of the jail that was dedicated mostly to incarcerated women, save for the 35 men with whom he shares a dormitory-style existence in a big open room—bunk beds, no privacy, extreme boredom, and four television sets tuned to ESPN, Telemundo, BET, and a news channel. Sam said he could try to persuade his fellow inmates to change up the channel selection, but television bores him, so he has no interest in that challenge. He prefers watching a small selection of movies or playing some inferior video games on a tablet, without an internet connection, that the prison provides him and other inmates.
When I told him he seemed better than I had anticipated, he replied that he’d become good at faking it. So, yes, life inside the MDC is not the Bahamas. But, truly, I had expected to see him coping less well. At the MDC, Sam has mostly been permitted his prescription medications, and the cocktail he’s been allowed has him thinking clearly, he said, and energized for the legal battle he plans to wage soon against the verdict.
In the meantime, he told me, he doesn’t fear for his safety. He can use the bathroom and shower a couple of times a week in peace. He’s always been a light sleeper, and he’s still not sleeping soundly at the MDC, but mostly because people sometimes bug him during the night about those bags of rice, which they intend to use to barter. He has not been touched or abused, and he seemed notably thankful for that.
He acknowledged that he has a unique rap sheet at MDC, and his fellow prisoners indeed recognize him. He estimated that about half of the other 35 men in his unit were murderers who had been turned into cooperating witnesses for the prosecution in exchange for not serving a life sentence. In prison, many inmates consider cooperating witnesses the lowest form of vermin, lower even than child molesters. Sam also told me that some of the other prisoners tried to get close to him, thinking they would benefit financially from the proximity to a former billionaire. He doesn’t play along, he said.
We didn’t talk about his trial strategy or whether he intentionally siphoned off the $8 billion of FTX customer funds into Alameda. Both topics seemed moot at this point. We did discuss his onetime girlfriend, Caroline Ellison, whom he selected to run Alameda after lawyers kept hounding him about the inherent conflicts in him running both FTX and the hedge fund. (He chose to run FTX.) He acknowledged that he had asked a few other people if they would be interested in the role, but they turned him down. Ellison, he said, was a good manager of people and a good administrator but didn’t like making big investments and didn’t like taking risks. (Obviously, this seems like a bizarre aversion for a hedge fund manager, but I didn’t belabor the point.) In any event, Alameda ended up doing both.
He regretted that he had not tried harder to find another executive. He also said he should have ignored the lawyers and just kept running both FTX and Alameda, conflicts be damned, sort of like how Elon Musk oversees his various companies. Wishing he had ignored his lawyers’ advice emerged as a theme of Sam’s during our visit.

Legal Therapy

We did talk a fair amount about his appeal and about how he believed he was set up to be the fall guy—the victim of the old build-’em-up-only-to-tear-’em-down narrative arc. His theory of the case was that by the fall of 2022, it was every man for himself on a boat that looked to be sinking. By early November 2022, FTX was facing a liquidity crunch. Sam first sought a deal with Binance, which quickly fell apart or was never truly real, and was in the process of trying to raise billions in capital when his lawyers advised him to turn the keys of FTX over to John J. Ray III, which he did. Ray quickly filed FTX for bankruptcy and installed Sullivan & Cromwell, the company’s outside counsel, as counsel to the debtor.
Sam became the target of federal prosecutors, he told me, soon after FTX’s outside counsel at Sullivan & Cromwell made a presentation to them, on November 9, 2022, a day or so before the bankruptcy filing, about what they believed Sam may have engineered between FTX and Alameda, which has been described as the theft of $8 billion of customer money. In a sworn declaration about that meeting, S&C attorney Andrew Dietderich said he reported to the D.O.J. only what Ryne Miller, FTX’s U.S. general counsel, told him about a problem of “reconciling digital assets with entitlements” on FTX’s U.S. exchange, and nothing about Sam and his alleged transgressions.
Sam told me that had he not been persuaded by Sullivan & Cromwell and then by his personal attorneys to relinquish his job as C.E.O. to Ray, the company would not have filed for bankruptcy, and it would still be a thriving enterprise, worth $80 billion now. In this alternate reality, he would be worth $40 billion and he certainly wouldn’t be at the MDC. (S&C declined to comment on Sam’s theory of the case. It’s also fair to reiterate here that Sam was sentenced to 25 years in prison after a jury convicted him of the crimes described above.)
I got the distinct impression that Sam still doesn’t believe he committed any crimes, only that he was the one responsible for putting FTX in a position where it was vulnerable to a bank run and the devious actions of its competitors, not unlike how both Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers failed in 2008. Why, Sam wondered, was he prosecuted when no one at either Bear or Lehman faced criminal prosecution? During our chat, Sam was contrite and certainly chastened, but not exactly apologetic: He was adamant about his innocence, aside from a few degrees of negligence—punishable, in his view, perhaps by civil consequences, not criminal penalties and a quarter-century sentence.
According to Sam’s theory, he isn’t in prison for commingling assets of FTX and Alameda. Instead, he’s an innocent guy who didn’t get a chance to negotiate a deal with the federal prosecutors, and wonders why he was even prosecuted at all for what he believes was a form of a bank run. Instead, they just presented him with his indictment and told him he could eat it— accept it and plead guilty and then get sentenced, or go to trial and try to fight it. Since there was no plea bargain on the table, he said, he fought the charges at trial, and lost. Unlike his fellow inmates, he told me, Sam speaks to his new attorney nearly every weekday for an hour or so, as the focus of his appeal comes into view. He expects to file it this fall. Yes, he will appeal, but most people think he faces long odds of success.
On the day of my visit, Sullivan & Cromwell, still counsel to the debtor-in-possession in FTX’s bankruptcy case, filed a first draft of a plan of reorganization that appears to give its customers and creditors all of their money back, plus a little more—a return of $15 billion on $12 billion of claims—in large part because of the investments Sam made through Alameda. The plan, which still has a long way to go before being confirmed, also gives Sullivan & Cromwell, along with other FTX advisors, “exculpation” from future lawsuits related to its conduct in the matter. This is not unusual in a plan of reorganization. But Sam has exhaustive thoughts on this subject, which I may explore with him in a follow-up conversation.

Go West, Young Man

I’m not sure how much longer Sam will be at the MDC, and neither is he. He has asked to remain in Brooklyn at least until the fall, when his appellate brief will be filed. But that’s not up to him, of course. If he gets moved, which could come at any moment without warning or explanation, I’m told, it would probably be to California, closer to Palo Alto, where he grew up, the son of two Stanford Law professors. At that point, the question will be whether he gets to spend his incarcerated years in a federal penitentiary, which are mostly nasty places filled with hardened criminals, or in more of a minimum security prison, as Mike Milken once did.
If he does get moved out of Brooklyn, his family and legal team worry, he could spend as long as four months on a bus, handcuffed to the seat, making his way, slowly, across the country. Such prison buses make frequent stops—picking up new prisoners, dropping off others—which explains why they take so long to reach their final destinations. There’s also a remote possibility that he could be placed on one of the many planes operated by the U.S. Marshals Service, a.k.a. “Con Air.” But he’s more likely to get the infamous “diesel therapy,” they fear. Either way, during this hypothetical cross-country journey, Sam would be completely incommunicado with both his family and his lawyers until he reaches his new home in California, deprived of the minimal access to the internet and email he now enjoys in Brooklyn.
Just as we were getting ready to discuss some knotty issues, such as his choices during his trial or the fact that many of the people who once worked for him had turned against him to save themselves, our visiting time was up. It was non-negotiable. We quickly shook hands again. Then Sam went back to his dormitory and I went back outside into a glorious spring afternoon.
Credits/Via: https://puck.news/exclusive-prison-chat-with-sam-bankman-fried/
submitted by polloponzi to wallstreetbets [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 19:09 otakunomnoms Things to Do

Besides watching artists! I love music festivals because there are usually so many other things to check out besides just the music.
For reference I went to Life is Beautiful in Vegas and checked out a cocktail-making class and a comedy show. Outsidelands had a bunch of different things to do.
This is my FIRST time at Bottlerock and I only have a couple must-see artists. I am only going Friday. I think I'd like to check out the Williams Sonoma culinary stage.
Any opinions on that? Would like to get everyone's favorite non-artist thing to watch or non-artist activity! Thanks!
submitted by otakunomnoms to bottlerock [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 14:23 avtenosba Williams Sonoma Discount Code for May 2024

Check out the link for Williams Sonoma Discount Code for May 2024. Once on the website, you'll have access to a variety of coupons, promo codes, and discount deals that are updated regularly to help you save on your purchase.
submitted by avtenosba to DealsUnique [link] [comments]


2024.05.15 04:49 styleesmave Williams Sonoma Coupon Codes of May 2024

Use the link for Williams Sonoma Coupon Codes of May 2024. The website features a wide selection of coupons, promo codes, and discount deals that are updated regularly for you to choose from and make your purchase more affordable.
submitted by styleesmave to DealsUnique [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 19:07 enilorac412 Building out collection colors

Building out collection colors
I’m new to the world of Le Creuset and thanks to some holidays have started to establish my collection. I started out with Ocean not knowing the color was William Sonoma specific. Since then, I’ve added a shallot pie dish, and then have gotten a set of four mini dishes in white, sea salt, shallot, and shell pink.
I received a couple outlet items that I need to exchange so am trying to plan out future moves. I was going to get two more shallot mini cocottes (have two ocean currently), but now I’m wondering if I should do two sea salt and start to lean into the colors of the mini dishes. Wondering if there are any suggestions for other complimentary colors or personal experience here!! I know they will never look “bad” together but I’m a bit picky with the color positions.
submitted by enilorac412 to LeCreuset [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 16:53 PercentageExtra1008 Bakeware not made in China

I am looking for BIFL bakeware (deep dish pans, bread pans, etc) not made in China.
I’ve always loved le creuset but looking on William Sonoma their products are made in China/ Thailand.
Brands I’ve found so far….
TIA
submitted by PercentageExtra1008 to BuyItForLife [link] [comments]


2024.05.14 06:55 SororityLifer GE Profile Double Gas Range

My GE Profile Double Gas Range which was only 1.5 years old began to burn everything. A pot holder melted onto a pan in the time it takes to remove the pan from the oven and set on top. A "gold" Williams-Sonoma pan began to melt, and all food either turned to ash or was close to it in under 30 minutes of cook time. Some items didn't last 10 minutes. It took 7 visits by 5 different technicians but the problem was finally solved. It wasn't the thermostats or the control panel, or heating elements, or the 5 other things they thought it could be. It was a malfunctioning relay switch that's in the back exterior of the oven. Since I was unable to find anyone having this issue I thought I'd post here just in case someone else's oven suddenly starts showing its set at 350 or 250 (warm setting) and actually be in excess of 600 degrees.
submitted by SororityLifer to appliancerepair [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 17:03 Short_Algo $WSM Awaiting Short Signal based off 10 signals $1,575 net profit 5.23 profit factor 80% win rate on a 15-min chart. Free trial at https://www.ultraalgo.com/?afmc=46 #trading #stocks #investing #money

$WSM Awaiting Short Signal based off 10 signals $1,575 net profit 5.23 profit factor 80% win rate on a 15-min chart. Free trial at https://www.ultraalgo.com/?afmc=46 #trading #stocks #investing #money submitted by Short_Algo to StockTradingIdeas [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 16:35 Murky-Focus-9747 Should I keep the replacement or try again?

Should I keep the replacement or try again?
Bought this KSM70SKXX just under a year ago. Have not been able to secure the food grinder or shreddeslicer. Finally figured out why (metal ring at hub opening is off center, decreasing opening size, see photo), talked to KA customer service, they sent me a replacement which has the same issue but to a lesser degree. (The sliceshredder can be secured by the screw and the food grinder can go in enough that although the screw cannot be completely tightened, the tab is in far enough, I think.) However, the metal band around the head of the new mixer is loose. Should I keep trying until I get a replacement with a perfectly fitted ring and tight band? Or stick with this replacement? I did go to Williams Sonoma to view their shelf model and its metal ring on the hub is perfectly aligned, so I know it is possible. Thoughts?
submitted by Murky-Focus-9747 to Kitchenaid [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 11:32 darko886 [H] 75% Paypal [W] Williams Sonoma or Pottery Barn

Looking for up to $400 in Williams Sonoma or Pottery Barn (or any of their brands). Comment before PM please.
submitted by darko886 to giftcardexchange [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 10:05 hoangtotq Apply for the Williams Sonoma Key Rewards Visa

Apply for the Williams Sonoma Key Rewards Visa
submitted by hoangtotq to loansbox [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 02:48 Kidspud SMEG/High-End Mini-Fridge?

I've been on the lookout for a mini-fridge the past few months. I've seen a lot of different styles and pricepoints, but one that surprised me is the SMEG mini-fridge. Now, it does look nice, but $1300 is what I could spend on a good, full-size fridge. What's even stranger is that I can't find any good reviews on it.
I'm curious if anyone here has looked at the SMEG mini-fridge or any other mini-fridges from higher end brands (like Sub-Zero, for example). I have no problem spending money if it means getting a quality product, but it should go without saying that if I can avoid spending money, that's always good. And if anyone has recommendations on quality, quiet mini-fridges, I'm all ears.
submitted by Kidspud to Appliances [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 21:44 weetietwinkless Williams Sonoma Coupon Codes of 2024

Use the link for Williams Sonoma Coupon Codes of 2024. The website features a wide selection of coupons, promo codes, and discount deals that are updated regularly for you to choose from and make your purchase more affordable.
submitted by weetietwinkless to DiscountCrazy [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 10:52 BringbackMarchais Toutes les livrées du Concorde

Toutes les livrées du Concorde submitted by BringbackMarchais to Giscardpunk [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 20:53 Jennie579 Map posted!

Map posted! submitted by Jennie579 to bottlerock [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 19:46 wsvance Bankruptcy Ch 13 Joint w/ USCIS case pending

Hi
I am a US born citizen with wife who is waiting on I130. She will require a I 601a. Going through school Destroyed My finances and the only way out is bankruptcy I feel like. How will this affect my wife's immigration case if I put her as a joint petitioner?
Thanks, William
submitted by wsvance to legaladvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 19:46 wsvance USCIS bankruptcy

Hi
I am a US born citizen with wife who is waiting on I130. She will require a I 601a. Going through school Destroyed My finances and the only way out is bankruptcy I feel like. How will this affect my wife's immigration case if I put her as a joint petitioner?
Thanks, William
submitted by wsvance to USCIS [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 04:22 PrimeBrisky Kitchen cutlery stores?

Recently visited Denver and found a number of specialty kitchen cutlery stores there. From primarily in-house knives to well stocked Japanese knives.
Does Dallas or the metro have such stores? Just Googling I feel like I’m striking out. Williams Sonoma and Sur la Table… that’s great but they don’t have a crazy variety compared to what I saw in a significantly smaller metro area. It’s Wusthof, Henckels, or Shun. Plenty of great restaurants around and plenty of home cooks that enjoy a good knife. Where to find them?
submitted by PrimeBrisky to Dallas [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 03:15 lala4now If You Need A Little Peche In Your Life...

If You Need A Little Peche In Your Life... submitted by lala4now to LeCreuset [link] [comments]


2024.05.09 00:34 BROXAHFAREWELL Le Creuset Casserole Dish (Azure Color), 3-Pack of Carbone Marinara Sauces, Carbone Parmesan Grater, a Meat Tenderizer, a recipe card, a Seghesio Hadley & Bennet Apron, one (1) $100 Seghesio Gift Card, and one (1) Williams Sonoma Classic Logo Towel {US} (06/30/2024)

submitted by BROXAHFAREWELL to sweepstakes [link] [comments]


2024.05.08 09:40 TurretLauncher Big Lots' Stunning $15 16-Piece Glassware Set Is Nearly Identical to a 6-Piece Williams Sonoma Set That's More Than 3x the Price: You really get more bang for your buck.

submitted by TurretLauncher to BigLots [link] [comments]


http://swiebodzin.info