Security

Cyber-crime

FTX crypto-villain Sam Bankman-Fried convicted on all charges

Jury took just four hours to reach guilty verdicts


Sam Bankman-Fried, the founder and former CEO of crypto exchange FTX and trading firm Alameda Research, has been found guilty of seven criminal charges.

FTX was once valued at $32 billion, and Bankman-Fried was fêted as a visionary thanks in part to his willingness to spruik his firm, and crypto, to almost anyone willing to put a microphone in front of his face. FTX also spent lavishly on sponsorships and political donations, building a brand that stood out in the scrappy world of cryptocurrency.

But in November 2022 the org filed for bankruptcy. It emerged that FTX had shifted funds to Alameda, which made losing bets. Money moved from FTX to Alameda could not be accessed by FTX investors, leaving them unable to cash out and causing the exchange to collapse.

It soon emerged that FTX had quickly spawned a web of interrelated entities, which the interim CEO appointed to clean up after the collapse rated "a complete failure of corporate controls" and evidence of "a complete absence of trustworthy financial information."

The source of those quotes, John Ray III, knows financial foul-ups when he sees them: he wound up the notorious energy outfit Enron.

Bankman-Fried was swiftly extradited from the Bahamas, where he had set up shop, and soon faced numerous lawsuits.

One of those actions, United States vs Bankman-Fried, alleged he defrauded stakeholders to the tune of $10 billion and reached court in early October.

On Thursday, the jury empaneled by the US District Court for the Southern District of New York took just four hours to find Bankman-Fried guilty on the following seven charges:

The combined maximum sentences for all of those charges could see Bankman-Fried go away for 110 years.

A key witness in the case appears to have been Bankman-Fried's sometime romantic partner, Caroline Ellison. She testified that Bankman-Fried directed her to shift around $10 billion from FTX to bail out Alameda. FTX co-founder Gary Wang also testified that Bankman-Fried knew of Alameda's troubles and of funds shifted to address them, but did not challenge the decisions.

As CEO of a giant financial services outfit, Bankman-Fried should have known the money-shuffle was not appropriate.

Bankman-Fried, an infamously awkward character, testified in his defence and portrayed himself as the victim of the never-ending ructions of the crypto market.

Which clearly did not work – the jury needed just four hours to reach seven guilty verdicts. Sentencing in United States vs Bankman-Fried has been set for March 28, 2024.

Bankman-Fried will probably appeal, making that date moot. But he also faces several other cases that will likely run for years.

FTX has arguably replaced Enron as the ultimate example of corporate incompetence.

The former CEO will therefore get to play his new role as the face of everything that's wrong with crypto for years come. That's cold comfort to investors whose faith in the growth of digital assets with no intrinsic value saw them trust FTX to make them money. ®

Send us news
112 Comments

That call center tech scammer could be a human trafficking victim

Interpol increasingly concerned as abject abuse of victims scales far beyond Asia origins

Binance and CEO admit financial crimes, billions coughed up to US govt

Chief quits, pays own penalty after helping crooks launder cash, aiding sanctions evaders

Bitcoin's thirst for water is just as troubling as its energy appetite

A single transaction chugs 6.2 million times more than a credit card swipe

Leader of pro-Russia DDoS crew Killnet 'unmasked' by Russian state media

Also: NXP China attack, Australia can't deliver on ransom payment ban (yet), and Justin Sun's very bad month

US cybercops take on 'pig butchering' org, return $9M in scammed crypto

Crims drain wallets of marks after letting them in on 'awesome crypto scheme secret'

Crypto crasher Do Kwon's extradition approved, but destination is unclear

Hey Google, are the jails nicer in South Korea or the US?

Singapore to deter crypto investors with tactics like those used on smokers, gamblers

Buying on credit forbidden, affordability tests imposed, and accreditation required for big bets

48-nation bloc to crack down on using crypto assets to avoid tax

Blockheaded cheats given four years to find new schemes

Poloniex crypto-exchange offers 5% cut to thieves if they return that $120M they nicked

White hat bounty looks more like a beg bounty

Monero Project admits thieves stole 6-figure sum from a wallet in mystery breach

It's the latest in a string of unusual wallet-draining attacks that began in April

Cryptojackers steal AWS credentials from GitHub in 5 minutes

Researchers just scratching surface of their understanding of campaign dating back to 2020

US v Sam Bankman-Fried trial begins ... as imploded crypto-biz boss sues his insurer

After people's funds go up in smoke, ex-CEO seeks cash to foot legal bills