Weekend Herald

Feeling of ‘relief ’ as FTX theft exposed

One-time girlfriend is now the star witness in Sam Bankman-Fried trial

- Joshua Oliver and Joe Miller

Caroline Ellison fought back tears as she recalled the “relief ” she felt at not having “to lie anymore” after it was revealed last year that the trading firm she ran had secretly stolen billions of dollars in customers’ money from Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX cryptocurr­ency exchange.

In a Manhattan court on Wednesday (US time), the 28-yearold, who ran FTX affiliate Alameda Research until its collapse in November 2022, read out private messages sent to Bankman-Fried in the company’s final days, including one in which she wrote: “This is the best mood I’ve been in in like a year.”

Her voice broke as she explained to the court the flood of conflictin­g emotions she felt during the demise of FTX, as she was released from the “dread” of Alameda’s secret dealings — which included betting with US$10 billion of FTX customer funds — being uncovered, while feeling “indescriba­bly bad” for those harmed.

In the messages, a few days before FTX filed for bankruptcy, Ellison wrote that “it just feels great to get it over with one way or another”. Bankman-Fried replied “Congrats?” and “Because shit’s exciting?”

Ellison, who had an “on-again, offagain” romantic relationsh­ip with Bankman-Fried, pleaded guilty to fraud last year and is the star witness in the trial against her former boss, who faces decades in prison if convicted.

In a second day of testimony, she walked the jury through a document Bankman-Fried wrote reviewing FTX’s options as it fought for survival.

The former crypto billionair­e listed Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz as one of the people “most likely” to bail out the exchange, alongside Pete Briger of Fortress Investment Group, and private equity firm Apollo.

Moskovitz and Bankman-Fried were followers of effective altruism, a form of philanthro­py that seeks to maximise the impact of donations. Ultimately, the FTX founder was unsuccessf­ul in raising funds to bail himself out.

FTX collapsed after a flood of customer withdrawal­s exposed a multibilli­on-dollar hole in its balance sheet, created in part by secret lending to Alameda.

Ellison said Bankman-Fried had in June 2022 directed her to create seven “alternativ­e” balance sheets for Alameda, some of which disguised billions of dollars of kickbacks to FTX executives.

She said she was ordered to cover up how the business was “funnelling” almost US$4.6b to Bankman-Fried and senior staffers, as well as the fact that the trading group was “borrowing $10bn from FTX customers”.

A version of Alameda’s accounts that made its “assets look larger” was provided to crypto lenders including Genesis, which was calling in loans amid a sharp downturn in the sector, Ellison testified.

Genesis’ lending unit went bankrupt in January, owing its own creditors more than US$3b.

The jury was shown two versions of the spreadshee­t side by side, revealing how Ellison had removed a reference to stolen customer funds, entitled “FTX borrows”. Loans that had been provided to FTX executives and partly invested into start-ups were also obscured.

“I was mostly concerned that if anyone would find out everything would come crashing down,” she said.

Ellison has painted the former tycoon as the orchestrat­or of a scheme that allowed Alameda to gamble with billions of dollars of FTX customer money, hiding the arrangemen­t from investors, journalist­s and the public.

She also implicated BankmanFri­ed in bribery. Ellison testified that in 2021, he ordered U$150 million to be paid to officials to release roughly US$1b in funds held on two Chinese crypto exchanges, which had been frozen as part of an investigat­ion into money laundering.

Ellison said the move was taken after attempts to limit the damage by trading using accounts in the name of “Thai prostitute­s” failed.

When a colleague whose father was a Chinese government official raised objections, Bankman-Fried “yelled at her to shut the f*** up”, Ellison said.

In her own notes, which were entered into evidence, Ellison referred to the cost of the alleged bribes as “the thing”, which she said was because she “did not want to put in writing that we had paid. . . bribes”.

That reticence came after Bankman-Fried had repeatedly urged his colleagues to use ephemeral messaging, in order to avoid “legal trouble”, Ellison said.

“Sam directed us to use the disappeari­ng messages setting on our Signal. . . he said that we should be very careful what we put in writing,” she added.

Bankman-Fried has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

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