Jamaica Gleaner

Sam Bankman-Fried stole customer funds from the beginning of FTX, exchange co-founder tells jury

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SAM BANKMAN-FRIED authorised the illegal use of FTX customers’ funds and assets to plug financial gaps at an affiliated hedge fund from the exchange’s earliest days, FTX’s co-founder Gary Wang told a New York jury on Friday as prosecutor­s pressed their case that Bankman-Fried was the mastermind behind one of the biggest frauds in United States history.

Eventually, the losses at the hedge fund, Alameda Research, became so large that there was no way to hide them any longer, Wang said in his second day of testimony.

“FTX was not fine,” Wang said, referring to the now-infamous tweet that Bankman-Fried wrote only a few days before the exchange filed for bankruptcy in November 2022.

Prosecutor­s allege that Bankman-Fried, 31, stole billions of dollars from investors and customers in order to fund a lavish lifestyle in The Bahamas and buy the influence of politician­s, celebritie­s, and the public.

Wang was FTX’s chief technology officer and is part of what has been referred to as the “inner circle” of FTX executives who have agreed to testify against Bankman-Fried in exchange for leniency in their own criminal cases. He is expected to finish his testimony Tuesday. Wang has pleaded guilty to wire fraud, securities and commoditie­s fraud as part of his agreement with prosecutor­s.

Prosecutor­s hope to have Caroline Ellison, the former CEO of Alameda and Bankman-Fried’s ex-girlfriend, take the stand Tuesday.

Wang and Bankman-Fried started Alameda in 2017 then founded FTX in 2019.

Wang told the jury that at the direction of Bankman-Fried, he inserted code into FTX’s operations that would give Alameda Research the ability to make nearly unlimited withdrawal­s from FTX and have a line of credit up to US$65 billion. Alameda was given these privileges initially because the hedge fund was the primary market maker for FTX’s customers i n the exchange’s early days.

Alameda took advantage of its unlimited withdrawal capabiliti­es and lines of credit from the start, Wang said, in the forms of cryptocurr­encies as well as dollars. Initially it was only a few million dollars but grew over the years.

“It withdrew more funds than it had on exchange,” Wang said, adding that the money that it withdrew “was money from (FTX) customers”.

The relationsh­ip was effectivel­y a two-way street, where the exchange could help out the hedge fund and vice versa as FTX quickly grew between 2019 and 2022. At one point, when a technical bug caused FTX to have hundreds of millions of dollars in paper losses on a particular cryptocurr­ency, Wang said Bankman-Fried ordered that loss to be moved on to Alameda’s balance sheet because FTX’s financial condition was more visible to the public while Alameda’s balance sheet was not.

Alameda’s deep financial ties to FTX were in contrast to Bankman-Fried’s public statements that the hedge fund was “no different” from any other FTX customer. The losses at Alameda reached as much as US$14 billion in the months leading up to the exchange’s bankruptcy. Bankman-Fried and Wang discussed solutions to the problems at Alameda in the summer of 2022, including shutting down the hedge fund, but by then it was too late.

“(Alameda) had no way of repaying this,” Wang testified.

FTX filed for bankruptcy November 11. Wang testified that within hours of FTX filing for bankruptcy, Bankman-Fried ordered him to send the bulk of FTX’s remaining assets to the securities regulators in The Bahamas instead of to the US authoritie­s handling the bankruptcy. Bankman-Fried said the Bahamian regulators “seemed more friendly to him, and they seemed more likely to let him stay in control of the company compared to the US”, Wang testified.

Following this exchange, Wang contacted the FBI on November 17, saying he knew what he had done was wrong and he wanted to avoid a long prison sentence for his crimes.

In opening statements this week, Bankman-Fried’s lawyers claimed that Wang and other FTX lieutenant­s failed to do their jobs, including setting up appropriat­e financial hedges that would have protected FTX from last year’s crash in crypto prices. They said Bankman-Fried believed he was managing a liquidity crisis caused by cryptocurr­ency values that collapsed by over 70 per cent and criticism from one of his biggest competitor­s that caused a run on his companies by customers seeking to recover their deposits.

In their cross-examinatio­n of Wang on Friday, Bankman-Fried’s lawyers tried to downplay any special relationsh­ip between Alameda and FTX, saying it was not unusual for marketmaki­ng entities such as Alameda to have losses or borrow funds from an exchange.

 ?? AP ?? FTX founder Sam BankmanFri­ed.
AP FTX founder Sam BankmanFri­ed.

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