Chattanooga Times Free Press

FTX founder heads to court after federal judge rejects bail request

- BY LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK — FTX founder Sam BankmanFri­ed will head to a New York courtroom Thursday to face a federal judge who said his effort to contact a likely trial witness against him seemed designed so they would “sing out of the same hymn book.”

On Tuesday, Judge Lewis A. Kaplan rejected Bankman’s-Fried’s lawyers’ request that oral arguments about his bail be cancelled because lawyers on both sides have settled their difference­s on necessary changes to his bail package in order to prevent inappropri­ate contact with witnesses or damaging encrypted social media communicat­ions.

The arguments, set for Thursday morning, will proceed as scheduled, the judge ruled as he declined to immediatel­y approve new bail conditions that defense lawyers said prosecutor­s had agreed with, including the exemption of certain individual­s from a proposed no-contact list and permission for Bankman-Fried to place audio and video calls.

A spokespers­on for Bankman-Fried’s attorneys declined to comment.

The hearing was scheduled after prosecutor­s said Bankman-Fried sent an encrypted message over the Signal texting app on Jan. 15 to the general counsel of FTX US.

“I would really love to reconnect and see if there’s a way for us to have a constructi­ve relationsh­ip, use each other as resources when possible, or at least vet things with each other. I’d love to get on a phone call sometime soon and chat,” Bankman-Fried wrote to the FTX general counsel, who isn’t named but is dubbed “Witness 1,” in the prosecutor­s’ letter.

Federal prosecutor­s told Kaplan that BankmanFri­ed’s communicat­ions indicate he may be trying to influence a witness with incriminat­ing evidence against him.

Last week, Kaplan wrote that Bankman’sFried’s lawyers appealed to him to interpret the message “in a benign way.” But he said their argument was not persuasive.

“In perhaps more colloquial terms, it appears to have been an effort to have both the defendant and Witness 1 sing out of the same hymn book,” Kaplan said.

The judge said a possible motive was evident from the fact that the general counsel was undisputed­ly a witness to some events likely to be at issue in the case and BankmanFri­ed faces the possibilit­y of a long prison term if he is convicted.

Kaplan said the question of whether further measures should be taken to restrict BankmanFri­ed’s actions was also raised by allegation­s that he directed employees in the past to use applicatio­ns whose communicat­ions could be erased and because he had invited a telephonic rather than written response from the general counsel.

The judge said he must decide whether further measures should be imposed to assure the

safety of the community from efforts by BankmanFri­ed to influence or tamper with prospectiv­e witnesses.

Bankman-Fried, 30, has been confined with electronic monitoring to his parents’ home in Palo Alto, California, since his December arrest on charges that he cheated investors and that he looted customer deposits on his cryptocurr­ency trading platform, in part to finance political donations and make risky trades at Alameda Research.

He has pleaded not guilty. A trial has been tentativel­y set for early October.

Also Tuesday, lawyers for Bankman-Fried appealed Kaplan’s decision to make public the names of two individual­s who signed BankmanFri­ed’s $250 million personal recognizan­ce bond. The names, which were ordered revealed at the request of news outlets, will remain secret while the appeal is considered.

“I would really love to reconnect and see if there’s a way for us to have a constructi­ve relationsh­ip, use each other as resources when possible, or at least vet things with each other. I’d love to get on a phone call sometime soon and chat.” — SAM BANKMAN-FRIED IN A MESSAGE TO THE GENERAL COUNSEL OF FTX US

 ?? AP PHOTO/CRAIG RUTTLE ?? In January, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried leaves Manhattan federal court in New York after he pleaded not guilty to charges he cheated investors and looted customer deposits on his cryptocurr­ency trading platform.
AP PHOTO/CRAIG RUTTLE In January, FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried leaves Manhattan federal court in New York after he pleaded not guilty to charges he cheated investors and looted customer deposits on his cryptocurr­ency trading platform.

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