Sam Bankman-Fried's trial to test dueling explanations for collapse of
crypto exchange
Send a link to a friend
[September 26, 2023] By
Luc Cohen
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In U.S. prosecutors' telling, Sam Bankman-Fried
embezzled money from depositors in his FTX cryptocurrency exchange ever
since he launched it in 2019, and the resulting shortfall led directly
to its collapse as crypto prices swooned last year.
But in his own version and in explanations put forth by his lawyers,
Bankman-Fried thought FTX, like a bank, could make investments with
customers' money as long as they were able to withdraw it - and he did
not know that actions taken by his closest colleagues had jeopardized
the availability of funds.
Over the course of six weeks starting on Oct. 3, a federal jury in
Manhattan is due to weigh these dueling narratives during Bankman-Fried's
criminal trial on fraud charges, before determining whether the
31-year-old former billionaire is guilty on seven counts of fraud and
conspiracy.
Bankman-Fried, who quit his job as a quantitative trader at Wall Street
firm Jane Street to found crypto hedge fund Alameda Research in 2017,
has pleaded not guilty.
A conviction would seal his spectacular fall from grace. During his
meteoric rise as the values of bitcoin and other digital assets soared
during 2020 and 2021, he became something of a poster child for
responsibility in the often rough-and-tumble cryptocurrency sector.
He plastered FTX's logo on a basketball arena in Miami and on MLB
baseball umpires' uniforms. He hired star athletes and actors to endorse
the platform as safe. And as his net worth surged to $26 billion, he
pledged to give most of his wealth away to philanthropic causes such as
pandemic preparedness.
FTX survived a downturn in crypto prices that saw other major digital
currency platforms fail earlier in 2022, with Bankman-Fried even bailing
some of them out.
But in November, crypto news outlet CoinDesk published an Alameda
balance sheet showing the fund was heavily exposed to FTT, a token
issued by FTX itself. That spurred a wave of customer withdrawals from
which the exchange could not recover.
Prosecutors say it was a facade all along. Bankman-Fried is charged with
stealing billions of dollars in FTX deposits to plug losses at Alameda
as well as to buy luxury real estate and donate to U.S. political
campaigns to promote crypto-friendly legislation.
"This is one of the biggest financial frauds in American history,"
Damian Williams, the U.S. Attorney in Manhattan, said in December 2022
upon announcing Bankman-Fried's arrest in the Bahamas, where FTX was
based.
Bankman-Fried has acknowledged inadequate risk management, but denied
stealing funds. He intended to tell Congress in a December hearing over
FTX's collapse that he made a mistake and did not know how much FTX had
lent Alameda due to a "quirk" in the company's internal controls,
according to a written draft of his planned testimony published by
Forbes and confirmed by Bankman-Fried as authentic. Bankman-Fried was
arrested before he could testify.
His lawyers have said Bankman-Fried should be allowed to introduce
evidence that he had a "good faith" belief that his treatment of
customer funds was in line with FTX's terms of service and the law. To
convict Bankman-Fried, prosecutors must show he intended to commit a
crime.
"It's always been Bankman-Fried's best strategy to show that he's not a
criminal mastermind - he was just out of his depth," said Mark Kasten, a
defense lawyer at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney who is not involved in the
case.
[to top of second column] |
Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange
FTX, arrives at court as lawyers push to persuade the judge
overseeing his fraud case not to jail him ahead of trial, at a
courthouse in New York, U.S., August 11, 2023. REUTERS/Eduardo
Munoz/File Photo
EX-COLLEAGUES TO TESTIFY
To prove their case, prosecutors have said they plan to call three
former members of Bankman-Fried's inner circle: former Alameda chief
executive Caroline Ellison, former FTX technology chief Gary Wang,
and former engineering chief Nishad Singh, who once shared a $30
million Bahamas penthouse with their onetime boss.
All three have pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with the
government.
Prosecutors say Bankman-Fried directed Wang to change FTX's computer
code to allow Alameda to borrow unlimited sums of money, a privilege
other exchange users lacked. Singh, in pleading guilty, said he was
aware by June 2022 that Alameda had borrowed billions from FTX
without customers' consent.
Ellison, Bankman-Fried's former romantic partner, said in her plea
hearing that she and Bankman-Fried agreed to hide the fact Alameda
had lent billions of dollars to FTX executives for their personal
use from the fund's own lenders.
Bankman-Fried has been preparing for trial from behind bars since
mid-August, when U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan revoked his $250
million bail after finding he likely tried to intimidate Ellison by
sharing her personal writings, in which she described struggling
with her job at Alameda, with a New York Times reporter.
In personal writings by Bankman-Fried that were also published by
the New York Times, on Sept. 14, he sought to push the blame for
Alameda's failure onto Ellison.
"She continually avoided talking about risk management - dodging my
suggestions - until it was too late," he wrote.
Bankman-Fried's defense lawyers have indicated in court papers that
they plan to challenge the credibility of all three witnesses.
Because their case rests on showing FTX customers' inability to
withdraw funds last November was the result of Bankman-Fried's
mistakes running his business, not a deliberate fraud scheme, they
are likely to push back hard on any testimony that their client knew
well ahead of the collapse about his companies' dire financial
straits, experts said.
"The question is, when did Bankman-Fried know that there wouldn't be
enough money?" said Paul Tuchmann, a former federal prosecutor and
current partner at Wiggin and Dana. "Obviously there wasn't enough
money to cover all the deposits. But when did he know that? When did
he have reason to believe that?"
(Reporting by Luc Cohen in New York; Editing by Amy Stevens and
Daniel Wallis)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |