S:P’s tally of the in-out money movement paints a rather volatile picture of life as a high-stakes online poker pro. Ivey borrowed $3m in July and August 2009 in six $500k chunks, repaid $1m on Oct. 29, borrowed another $500k on Nov. 13, repaid $2m in two payments on Nov. 20 and 22, then borrowed another $1m on Nov. 29.
The last repayment that S:P was able to confirm Ivey making to FTP was in the spring of 2010, after which Ivey continued to borrow a total of $3.215m, putting the total unresolved sum presumably owed to FTP at $6.215m. S:P acknowledges that Ivey may have repaid some of this debt via alternate methods unknown to them, but also suggests that this $6m+ may be what FTP subsidiary Tiltware referred to as the “large sum that [Ivey] owes the site” in its press release response to Ivey’s civil lawsuit against Tiltware in June (which Ivey voluntarily withdrew a month later).
S:P also uncovered similar loan/repayment figures for David Benyamine, albeit on a much smaller scale. However, S:P’s data suggests that Benyamine was able to make a withdrawal from his FTP account post-Black Friday, despite Benyamine’s account being registered in the United States. S:P also claims that multiple sources overheard Benyamine at this year’s World Series of Poker allegedly speaking with FTP representatives on the phone, asking them where he needed to go to collect cash for his tournament buy-ins, suggesting that he was still receiving funds from FTP as little as a month ago.