
Less than a month after Ripple said it had
"While this outcome is different from what was originally planned, we'll continue to support them and hope to work together in the future!" Ripple Chief Executive Officer Brad Garlinghouse wrote in a
Ripple will remain an investor in Fortress Financial Technologies, the parent of the Nevada-based chartered trust company, Garlinghouse said in the post on X.
Ripple said on Sept. 8 that it intended to acquire Fortress Trust, which also provides wallets and payments services.
Four days later, Fortune published a story saying that Fortress Trust had "lost between $12 to $15 million in crypto in a recent hack." The story quoted Scott Purcell, founder and CEO of Fortress Trust, saying only "four customers out of 225,000 customers" were affected.
In a text message to Bloomberg, Purcell said a third-party service had experienced a security breach but that his company had not itself been hacked, and that "6 out of Fortress's 250,000+ customers used it to log into their accounts."
The hackers "stole $15 million from those accounts," according to Purcell. "Ripple wired in $15 million so we could do the right thing and make those accounts whole. Zero customer impact or losses," he added.
Ripple may have to wait to get that $15 million back, Purcell said. "At some point we will pay them back, likely when we collect" from the third party that experienced the hack, he said.
Purcell also offered his perspective on the breakdown, saying that while some on the Ripple team were "super excited" about the technology and customer base at Fortress Trust, "others pushed back."
Ripple declined to comment beyond Garlinghouse's post on X.
The collapse of the deal comes mere weeks after BitGo backed out of a similar deal to buy custodian Prime Trust, of which Purcell is a former CEO.
Prime had been placed in
—With assistance from Emily Nicolle.