Crypto mogul and former CEO of FTX Sam Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison for defrauding hundreds of thousands of customers, leaving investors and lenders short by more than $11 billion. What do you think?
“It’s such a shame, by the time he gets out, he’ll have no idea what all the new scams are.”
Alana Patterson, Slum Developer
This Week’s Most Viral News: March 29, 2024
“Sooner or later, crypto was going to attract someone only interested in making a quick buck.”
Keaton Singh, Boiling Water Attendant
“There’s no way he can compete with all that alternate prison currency.”
As CNBC reports, authorities in The Bahamas have released a statement which reads:
The Bahamas and the United States have a shared interest in holding accountable all individuals associated with FTX who may have betrayed the public trust and broken the law. While the United States is pursuing criminal charges against SBF individually, The Bahamas will continue its own regulatory and criminal investigations into the collapse of FTX, with the continued cooperation of its law enforcement and regulatory partners in the United States and elsewhere.
US authorities issued a statement shortly afterwards:
G/O Media may get a commission
Bankman-Fried, who sucked ass at League of Legends by the way, ran FTX. In just a few short years, the crypto exchange went from nothing to plastering its name across all manner of sporting events and magazine covers. It was considered super-valuable because it charged customers fees to buy and bet on crypto, but also because Bankman-Fried was considered the next tech whiz who was going to use FTX to launch a “super app” for finance that would make crypto legit.
Earlier this year, however, the entire thing collapsed, partly because crypto itself is a scam, but mostly because FTX in particular was very much a scam, down to the fact senior members of the exchange had a chat group called “Wirefraud.” Bankman-Fried, who was in The Bahamas in part to avoid having to testify before the House Financial Services Committee (FTX also moved its headquarters to the Caribbean nation last year), is now facing criminal charges in two countries. Meanwhile, his successor in charge of what’s left of FTX has already publicly said the company spent “$5 billion…buying a myriad of businesses and investments, many of which may be worth only a fraction of what was paid for them,” and claimed that Bankman-Fried had engaged in “unacceptable management practices.”
UPDATE 8:20pm ET: The New York Times reportsthat Bankman-Fried is being charged by US authorities with wire fraud, wire fraud conspiracy, securities fraud, securities fraud conspiracy and money laundering.