Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge floats jail for Bankman-fried

FTX founder using untraceabl­e devices

- By Larry Neumeister

NEW YORK — A federal judge showed growing impatience Thursday with FTX founder Sam Bankman-fried’s use of the internet while on bail, suggesting that incarcerat­ion might eventually be the most effective way to prevent him from communicat­ing on electronic devices in ways that can’t be traced.

Judge Lewis A. Kaplan did not immediatel­y change a $250 million bail package that lets Bankman-fried live with his parents in Palo Alto, California, while preparing for trial on charges that he cheated investors and looted customer deposits at FTX, his cryptocurr­ency trading platform.

But he raised the possibilit­y for the first time that jail might be the only way to ensure Bankman-fried won’t outfox the government with ways to use electronic devices in ways that can’t be tracked.

“There is a solution, but it’s not one anybody’s proposed yet,” Kaplan said as Bankman-fried sat passively at the defense table. He then noted that there may be many devices in Bankman-fried’s family home that the government will not be tracking, even with any new rules imposed on his bail conditions.

“Why am I being asked to set him loose in this garden of electronic devices?” he asked prosecutor­s.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos said a more “drastic alternativ­e” would be to ban Bankman-fried’s use of all electronic devices, but he added that it would be difficult for him to prepare for a trial tentativel­y set for October if that were to occur.

The judge noted that Bankman-fried, according to prosecutor­s, “has done things that suggests to me that maybe he has committed or attempted to commit a federal felony while on release.”

Kaplan was alluding to a claim by prosecutor­s that Bankman-fried sent an encrypted message over the Signal texting app on Jan. 15 to the general counsel of FTX US.

According to prosecutor­s, the message said: “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.”

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

On Thursday, prosecutor­s asked Kaplan to more severely limit Bankman-fried’s use of electronic devices and the internet, including banning him from messaging applicatio­ns and requiring the installati­on of a device monitoring program on his cellphone and computer.

Mark Cohen, Bankman-fried lawyer, called the proposals by prosecutor­s “draconian” requests that would make it hard for lawyers and the defendant to prepare for trial. But he soon found himself on the defensive as Kaplan noted his client’s apparent bail violations, including accessing an encrypted internet site to watch the Super Bowl.

The judge mocked Bankman-fried’s use of an encrypted method to watch the game, noting that it was on any television. Cohen responded that there wasn’t a TV in the house.

Bankman-fried has been confined with electronic monitoring to his parents’ home since his December arrest on charges that he cheated investors, in part to finance political donations and make risky trades at Alameda Research. He has pleaded not guilty.

 ?? Seth Wenig The Associated Press ?? FTX founder Sam Bankman-fried leaves Manhattan federal court in New York on Thursday. The FTX founder was asked to explain his internet use while on bail.
Seth Wenig The Associated Press FTX founder Sam Bankman-fried leaves Manhattan federal court in New York on Thursday. The FTX founder was asked to explain his internet use while on bail.

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