San Diego Union-Tribune

FTX FOUNDER BANKMAN-FRIED ALLOWED $250M BOND, HOUSE ARREST

- BY LARRY NEUMEISTER Neumeister writes for The Associated Press.

Cryptocurr­ency entreprene­ur Sam BankmanFri­ed walked out of a Manhattan courthouse Thursday with his parents after they agreed to sign a $250 million bond and keep him at their California home while he awaits trial on charges that he swindled investors and looted customer deposits on his FTX trading platform.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos said in U.S. District Court that Bankman-Fried, 30, “perpetrate­d a fraud of epic proportion­s.” Roos proposed strict bail terms, including a $250 million bond — which he said is believed to be the largest federal pretrial bond ever — and house arrest at his parents’ home in Palo Alto.

An important reason for allowing bail was that Bankman-Fried agreed to waive extraditio­n, Roos said.

Reunited with his parents and lawyers inside the courthouse, an apparently silent Bankman-Fried shook the hands of a supporter before heading out the door, where photograph­ers and video crews rushed him until he left in a car.

Magistrate Judge Gabriel W. Gorenstein agreed to the bond and also approved the house arrest proposal, though he required that an electronic monitoring bracelet be affixed to Bankman-Fried before he left the courthouse. Roos had recommende­d it be attached today in California.

Bankman-Fried wore a suit and tie, sat between his attorneys and did not speak during the hearing except to answer the judge. Near its end, he was asked by Gorenstein whether he understood he would face arrest and owe $250 million if he chose to flee.

“Yes, I do,” BankmanFri­ed answered.

Soon afterward, the hearing ended and Bankman-Fried, his hands in his front pants pockets, was led from the courtroom by two U.S. marshals.

His bail conditions also require that he not open any lines of credit larger than $1,000.

The bond was to be secured by the equity in his parents’ home and the signature of them and two other financiall­y responsibl­e people with considerab­le assets, Roos said. The bail was described as a “personal recognizan­ce bond,” meaning the collateral did not need to meet the bail amount.

Bankman-Fried, arrested in the Bahamas last week, was flown to New York late Wednesday after deciding not to challenge his extraditio­n.

In a series of interviews before his arrest, BankmanFri­ed said he never intended to defraud anyone.

Bankman-Fried is charged with using money, illicitly taken from FTX customers, to enable trades at Alameda, spend lavishly on real estate, and make millions of dollars in campaign contributi­ons to U.S. politician­s.

FTX, founded in 2019, rode the crypto investing phenomenon to great heights quickly, becoming one of the world’s largest exchanges for digital currency. Seeking customers beyond the tech world, it hired the comic actor and writer Larry David to appear in a TV ad that ran during the Super Bowl, hyping crypto as the next big thing.

Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire, however, abruptly collapsed in early November when customers pulled deposits en masse amid reports questionin­g some of its financial arrangemen­ts.

 ?? REBECCA BLACKWELL AP ?? FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is escorted from the Magistrate Court in Nassau, Bahamas, on Wednesday. He was flown to New York late Wednesday.
REBECCA BLACKWELL AP FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is escorted from the Magistrate Court in Nassau, Bahamas, on Wednesday. He was flown to New York late Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States