Oof, this sounds awful. This obviously doesn't matter now, but my understanding is that call/put options are not taxable if you exercise them[1], rather they get included in the cost basis for whatever you end up owning once you exercise. I can see your friend losing lots of money due to the price fluctuations, but hopefully he didn't pay tax he didn't owe.
I'm not a lawyer or accountant so if I'm wrong, happy to learn. :)
Folks here are likely talking about employee stock options [NSOs and ISOs]. They've each got their pitfalls, but generally if you exercise them, you immediately owe tax [or AMT, depending--talk to an accountant first!] on the difference between your strike price and the current fair market value. If your employer's public, you know what that value is and can generally sell to cover your taxes. If your employer is private, you need to find out what the FMV is from your employer, and you still owe tax on it [if there's a gain], but you likely have no way of selling to pay the taxes.
I believe there were Illustra engineers who exercised options
shortly after the Informix acquisition at the end of 1995 (at $36/share)
but either couldn't immediately sell shares or choose not to
thinking the stock value would go up. They owed taxes on their
gains (about $30/share) but shortly thereafter the stock crashed
leaving the shares worth less then the taxes owed. The stock only
continued to decline in value after Informix restated earnings and
the extent of their channel stuffing became known.
I'm not a lawyer or accountant so if I'm wrong, happy to learn. :)
[1] https://www.investopedia.com/articles/active-trading/053115/...