There has been so much attention to centralized exchanges lately, it should be a warning to you and your friends to always be careful. Doing Arbitration with crypto.com is actually not very effective either. the aftermath of the FTX case also eroded cyrpto.com for being involved with Alameda Research. Automatically the public's response at that time would obviously be fast enough wherever they kept assets that were involved with Alameda, so most of the options they made were to temporarily withdraw their assets and not try to play games to send or withdraw assets on the relevant exchange.
Based on data from
Nansen, there are 5 wallets that we can track, namely Binance, Okx, Crypto.com, KuCoin, and Huobi. Since you have a problem with one of the 5 exchanges then we see that at this point Crypto.com has combined all of its assets pooling around $2,523,132,890 in the asset allocation at the time I wrote: BTC 28.74%, SHIB 20.82%, USDC 15.27 %, ETH 13.50%, USDT4 .91%, and Others 16.77%.
Regardless of your concerns, I suggest you take the time to read
this because the exchange is centralized as said theymos:
When you log into an exchange, yield platform, or other site, and it says that you have a balance of "1 BTC" or "1 USD", this does not actually mean that you have 1 BTC or 1 USD. Rather, it means that the company showing you this balance owes you that money. In other words, you've given a loan to the company. Maybe the company will pay you back, but history is littered with defunct companies which accepted deposits and were widely trusted for years, but which ended up not paying back their depositors in the end.