Las Vegas Review-Journal

FTX founder Bankman-fried charged in massive fraud scheme

- By Ken Sweet and Fatima Hussein

NEW YORK — The U.S. government charged Samuel Bankman-fried, the founder and former CEO of cryptocurr­ency exchange FTX, with a host of financial crimes on Tuesday, alleging he intentiona­lly deceived customers and investors to enrich himself and others, while playing a central role in the company’s multibilli­on-dollar collapse.

Federal prosecutor­s said Bankman-fried devised “a scheme and artifice to defraud” FTX’S customers and investors beginning in 2019, the year it was founded. He illegally diverted their money to cover expenses, debts and risky trades at the crypto hedge fund he started in 2017, Alameda Research, and to make lavish real estate purchases and large political donations, prosecutor­s said in a 13-page indictment.

Bankman-fried, 30, was arrested Monday in the Bahamas at the request of the U.S. government, and remains in custody after being denied bail.

He has been charged with eight criminal violations, ranging from wire fraud to money laundering to conspiracy to commit fraud. If convicted of all the charges, Bankman-fried — referred to by crypto enthusiast­s as “SBF” — could face decades in jail.

At a news conference on Tuesday, U.S. Attorney Damian Williams in New York called it “one of the biggest frauds in American history,” and said the investigat­ion is ongoing and fast-moving.

Bankman-fried has fallen hard and fast from the top of the cryptocurr­ency industry he helped to evangelize. FTX filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, when it ran out of money after the cryptocurr­ency equivalent of a bank run.

Before the bankruptcy, he was considered by many in Washington and on Wall Street as a wunderkind of digital currencies, someone who could help take them mainstream, in part by working with policymake­rs to bring more oversight and trust to the industry.

Bankman-fried had been worth tens of billions of dollars — at least on paper — and was able to attract celebritie­s like Tom Brady or former politician­s like Tony Blair and Bill Clinton to his conference­s at luxury resorts in the Bahamas. One prominent Silicon Valley firm, Sequoia Capital, invested hundreds of millions of dollars in FTX.

Sporting shorts and t-shirts to contrast himself with the buttoned-down world of Wall Street, he was the subject of fawning media profiles, a vocal advocate for a type of charitable giving known as “effective altruism,” and garnered millions of Twitter followers.

But since FTX’S implosion, Bankman-fried and his company have been likened to other disgraced financiers and companies, such as Bernie Madoff and Enron.

The criminal indictment against Bankman-fried and “others” at FTX is on top of civil charges announced Tuesday by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The SEC alleges Bankman-fried defrauded FTX customers by making loans to himself and other FTX executives, and illegally using investors’ money to buy real estate for himself and his family.

No other FTX executives were named in the indictment, nor was the CEO of Alameda Research, Caroline Ellison. Also not named in the indictment: Bankman-fried’s father, Joseph Bankman, a Stanford University law professor who was considered an adviser to his son.

U.S. authoritie­s said they will try to claw back any of Bankman-fried’s financial gains from the alleged scheme.

A lawyer for Bankman-fried, Mark S. Cohen, said Tuesday he is “reviewing the charges with his legal team and considerin­g all of his legal options.”

Before his arrest, Bankman-fried had been holed up in his luxury compound in the Bahamas. U.S. authoritie­s are expected to request his extraditio­n to the U.S.

Bankman-fried was denied bail at a court hearing in the Bahamas on Tuesday after prosecutor­s argued he was a flight risk, according to Our News, a broadcast news company based there. He will remain in custody at the Bahamas department of correction­s until Feb. 8, Our News reported.

The collapse of FTX — which followed other cryptocurr­ency debacles earlier this year — is adding urgency to efforts to regulate the industry.

 ?? Julia Nikhinson The Associated Press ?? U.S. Attorney Damian Williams speaks Tuesday during a news conference about the criminal charges filed in New York against FTX founder Sam Bankman-fried.
Julia Nikhinson The Associated Press U.S. Attorney Damian Williams speaks Tuesday during a news conference about the criminal charges filed in New York against FTX founder Sam Bankman-fried.

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