FTX founder Bankman-Fried to make U.S. court appearance after
extradition
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[December 22, 2022] By
Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is expected to appear
before a U.S. court on Thursday after being extradited from The Bahamas,
where he had remained since the collapse of his now-bankrupt
cryptocurrency exchange.
Bankman-Fried, 30, was arrested last week in the Bahamas, where he lived
and where FTX is based, after federal prosecutors in Manhattan charged
him with stealing billions of dollars in FTX customer assets to plug
losses at his hedge fund, Alameda Research, cementing the one-time
billionaire's fall from grace.
He departed the Caribbean nation in FBI custody shortly after 8 p.m. EST
(0100 GMT) on Tuesday night. Just hours later, U.S. prosecutors said two
of his closest former associates had pleaded guilty and were cooperating
with their probe - a move that significantly ramped up pressure on
Bankman-Fried.
"If you participated in misconduct at FTX or Alameda, now is the time to
get ahead of it," Williams said. "We are moving quickly and our patience
is not eternal."
At his U.S. court appearance, known as an arraignment, Bankman-Fried is
expected to be asked to enter a plea. The judge would determine whether
to grant him bail, and if so, on what conditions.
A spokesman for his U.S. legal team declined to comment.
Bankman-Fried has acknowledged risk-management failures at FTX, but has
said he does not believe he has criminal liability. At a court hearing
in The Bahamas on Wednesday, his lawyer there, Jerone Roberts, read an
affidavit in which Bankman-Fried said he had agreed to extradition in
part out of a "desire to make the relevant customers whole."
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Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder and
former CEO of crypto currency exchange FTX, is escorted into the
Magistrate Court building in Nassau, Bahamas December 21, 2022.
REUTERS/Marco Bello
He attended the hearing in a salmon-colored courthouse in capital
Nassau wearing a suit jacket and button-down shirt, a far cry from
the casual attire he became known for while running FTX. He spoke
briefly to tell the judge that he was waiving his right to contest
extradition, and to say that he had eaten and was in good health.
Since his arrest on Monday, Bankman-Fried was detained at the
Bahamas Department of Corrections prison, known as Fox Hill. A U.S.
State Department report in 2021 called conditions at the jail
"harsh" though local authorities say the facility has since
improved.
A son of two Stanford Law School professors and a graduate of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Bankman-Fried rode a
boom in the value of bitcoin and other digital assets to become a
billionaire several times over as well as influential donor to U.S.
political campaigns.
But in early November, reports that FTX commingled customer funds
with Alameda led to a wave of withdrawals from FTX, ultimately
prompting the exchange - valued at $32 billion as recently as
January 2022 - to declare bankruptcy. Cryptocurrency exchanges like
FTX allow users to buy and sell digital assets.
Bankman-Fried stepped down as CEO on Nov. 11, the same day as the
bankruptcy filing.
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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