
CZ’s autobiography: a call from Sam Bankman-Fried and a run-in with Gary Gensler
CZ’s new book recounts Binance’s rise, FTX’s fall and a run‑in with Gary Gensler.
On 8 April, Binance founder Changpeng Zhao (CZ) published a book, Freedom of Money. It recounts the exchange’s creation, his imprisonment, the collapse of FTX and a curious episode involving former SEC chair Gary Gensler.
The book Freedom of Money is live in some countries already.
It seems the book will be available to everyone on April 8th at 12:00 AM in their own time zone.
If you have trouble falling asleep at midnight today, grab a copy today. All proceeds go to charity.
English 👉…
— CZ 🔶 BNB (@cz_binance) April 8, 2026
CZ said he would donate all proceeds from the book to charity.
The foreword is by Binance co‑founder Yi He, who has worked with Zhao since 2014. She now serves as co‑CEO alongside Richard Teng.
The memoir’s theme is in the title. To Zhao, the freedom of money lies in cryptocurrencies’ ability to remove barriers to financial access, especially in regions with weak banking infrastructure or tight capital controls.
The text is interspersed with photographs from Zhao’s archive: from the family’s move to Vancouver and his first computer to shots with Vitalik Buterin and the exchange’s hurried relocation from China after the crypto ban.
CZ has revealed many photos for the first time in his newly released autobiography:
A photo of CZ with his sister and parents on August 6, 1989, when they first arrived at Vancouver Airport.
In 1990, CZ first encountered the x286 computer in Vancouver.
In 2014, CZ took… pic.twitter.com/LLsruv75NV
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 8, 2026
His account of FTX’s collapse
CZ says that in November 2022, during a phone call before Binance’s attempt to acquire FTX, Sam Bankman‑Fried asked him for “a couple of billion dollars”.
According to the Binance founder, the request was casual, “as if it were about a ham sandwich.” Zhao had not intended to do a deal; the letter of intent was merely a formality to assess the situation and protect users.
“I had zero desire to own FTX. I wasn’t particularly concerned about helping Sam Bankman‑Fried either. But I thought we might have to step in to protect users and the industry,” he added.

In CZ’s view, the trigger for FTX’s demise was a public statement by Caroline Ellison, the former head of Alameda Research. He called her offer to buy Binance’s FTT holdings at $22 to stabilise the market a fatal mistake.
By revealing a support level, Ellison prompted professional traders to short below it. The token fell to $15, then $5. Within 72 hours, $6bn was withdrawn from the exchange.
CZ also described an Exchange Collaboration group chat on Signal. It was created by FTX employee Zane Tackett during the Terra/LUNA crash. Besides Zhao and Bankman‑Fried, Coinbase chief executive Brian Armstrong and Kraken’s Jesse Powell were in the group.
The chat later drew interest from the Department of Justice and the SEC.
“They were looking for any hints of collusion or manipulation among exchanges. Of course, in our case there was nothing of the sort,” CZ said.
On 9 November Binance walked away from the deal. The platform’s FTT holdings, once valued at $580m, were wiped out. Zhao likened it to losing $1.6bn on LUNA investments six months earlier.
A run on the exchange followed: on 14 December $7bn was withdrawn in a day. CZ admitted he was worried, even though all user funds were in reserves. Within a month, clients returned deposits, surpassing previous levels.
A run‑in with the SEC chair and “behind‑the‑scenes” feuds
In 2019 Zhao met Gary Gensler, then a former CFTC official, and offered him an advisory role at Binance, which he declined.
On March 29, 2019, in Tokyo, CZ posed for a photo with former CFTC official Gary Gensler. He did not anticipate the future SEC chairman’s crackdown on cryptocurrencies. pic.twitter.com/1nOAIkGJAu
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) April 8, 2026
By then, Gensler already planned to lead the SEC, which he later did. Notably, it was during his chairmanship that the regulator sued Binance, and Zhao served a four‑month sentence in a US prison.
CZ also writes that Huobi founder Li Lin told him in 2025 he had been arrested because of a tip‑off from OKX founder Star Xu. Xu denied it.
1️⃣ 此事纯属不实信息。
在亚洲 Crypto 行业,任何有规模的平台和创始人,每年都会面临大量举报与投诉。如果举报本身就能决定结果,这个行业早就不存在了。火币的李总情商很高,多年来能把身边的各类人物都管理的很好,他不应该相信这种违背常识的鬼话。— Star_OKX (@star_okx) April 8, 2026
“After four months in prison, this man continues to spout nonsense to the world. I can only say: for someone used to lying, true nature never changes,” Xu said.
Zhao also recalled that in May 2015 the head of OKX publicly alleged forged signatures in contracts. The accusation, which CZ rejected, dealt a serious blow to his business reputation, the book says. In response, Xu again posted to back up his claim.
I had no intention of revisiting these old issues involving CZ from when I was younger. But since I’ve been dragged into this again because of the book, let’s restate the facts.
During his time at OKCoin, evidence of contract falsification was already made public on the internet… https://t.co/c9RzpjiPqV
— Star_OKX (@star_okx) April 8, 2026
Earlier, in an interview with Colin Wu, Zhao spoke about his childhood, moving to Canada and Binance’s rise.
In March 2026, a US court dismissed a lawsuit against the exchange and CZ over terrorism financing.
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