A Fourth FTX Executive Sentenced: Forfeits $11 Billion, But No Prison Time (apnews.com)
- Reference: 0175382531
- News link: https://yro.slashdot.org/story/24/11/02/2042237/a-fourth-ftx-executive-sentenced-forfeits-11-billion-but-no-prison-time
- Source link: https://apnews.com/article/ftx-bankmanfried-crytocurrency-sentencing-fa898c3ff61d9a797d016a12c0862ca1
But while he'd faced a maximum sentence of 75 years, he'll serve no time, according to [2]this report from the Associated Press :
> Singh, the company's former engineering director, was sentenced in Manhattan by Judge Lewis A. Kaplan, who said his cooperation was "remarkable." The judge noted that Singh did not learn of the billions of dollars that were misappropriated from FTX customer accounts and investors until two months before the fraud unraveled... Singh, 29, testified a year ago at Bankman-Fried's trial, saying he was "blindsided and horrified" when he saw the extent of the fraud behind the once-celebrated and seemingly pioneering firm. At sentencing, Singh said he was "overwhelmed with remorse" for his role in the fraud. "I strayed so far from my values, and words can't express how sorry I am," he said....
>
> The sentencing came a month after Caroline Ellison, another key witness at Bankman-Fried's trial and a former top executive in his cryptocurrency empire, was sentenced to two years in prison. At the time, Kaplan praised her cooperation but said it wasn't a get-out-of-jail-free card. On Wednesday, Kaplan drew a distinction between the cooperation by Ellison and Singh's work with prosecutors, saying Ellison had participated in the fraud "from the beginning" and had been aware of all the wrongdoing for years... [Defense attorney Andrew Goldstein] said leniency would encourage future cooperators in other criminal cases to come forward.
>
> Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos credited Singh with providing information within weeks of the fraud being publicly revealed, saying he helped prosecutors learn about crimes they might otherwise have never discovered, including his own. Roos said, for instance, that Singh told prosecutors about campaign finance violations that occurred as FTX executives made tens of millions of dollars in donations to political candidates. The prosecutor also said Singh revealed private conversations with Bankman-Fried that strengthened the government's case and enabled it to bring charges more quickly against multiple people. Singh gave prosecutors "documentary evidence the government did not have and likely never would have had," Roos said.
Bankman-Fried, of course, [3]began a 25-year sentence last November. And three weeks ago [4]FTX executive Ryan Salame made an update [5]on his LinkedIn profile . "I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as Inmate at FCI Cumberland!"
"His post quickly went viral," [6]notes CNN , "prompting Salame [7]to joke on X : "Today I learned people still use LinkedIn."
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2024/10/30/ftxs-nishad-singh-gets-not-jail-time-3-years-supervised-release.html
[2] https://apnews.com/article/ftx-bankmanfried-crytocurrency-sentencing-fa898c3ff61d9a797d016a12c0862ca1
[3] https://apnews.com/article/sam-bankman-fried-ftx-crypto-bitcoin-baa4c94f2c4237c860475ff92e6bcf42
[4] https://yro.slashdot.org/story/23/09/07/2137237/ex-ftx-executive-ryan-salame-to-forfeit-15-billion-as-part-of-guilty-plea
[5] https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryansalame/recent-activity/all/
[6] https://www.cnn.com/2024/10/11/business/ryan-salame-ftx-linkedin-profile-prison-intl-scli/index.html
[7] https://x.com/rsalame7926/status/1844549963725873634
TIL - Democrat judge goes soft on financial crime (Score:2)
[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Appointed by Democrat president Bill Clinton
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_A._Kaplan
Really? (Score:2)
Really? He made ELEVEN BILLION DOLLARS that he had to forfeit and yet was so ignorant of how the company was run that he didn't know that a scam was going on? Seriously Judge Kaplan? What kind of insider tips did he provide you to make you pretend to be that naive?
Re: (Score:2)
I think Sam Bankman-Fried and Bernie Madoff missed the memo, maybe go tell them so that they can submit this evidence to a judge to secure their release?
"No jail time": The creed of the corporate exec. (Score:2)
Sounds like "remarkable cooperation" is this guy's professional specialty, whether with the fraud going on all around him or with the criminal investigation into the fraud. How convenient.
11 billion what, exactly? (Score:2)
Are we talking 11 billion USD? Or crypto “worth” supposedly 11 billion dollars?
Theres a BIG difference between these two things. 11 gigaUSD is real purchasing power. The value of crypto tends to vanish the second you actually try to sell it.
Re: (Score:2)
If you don't know what $11 billion means, you shouldn't be around money.
Re: (Score:2)
Hooray for wash trades!
Re: (Score:2)
This copy/pasta is getting stale, you plop it down in every thread even vaguely related to the topic.
Re: (Score:3)
> The plan for all cryptocurrencies isn't what they want to make you think it is. It's more sinister than the egalitarian image the crypto boys portray for it.
> After the 2008 financial meltdown, cryptocurrencies were born out of it, declared to be the means by which people could be freed from banks/governments, and promised to avoid any such future meltdowns from happening ever again.
> But the crypto boys watched closely the result of that meltdown, and formulated their plan: create a new form of currency, and for it a new financial system detached from traditional ones (those burdened by "governments and regulations") - they called it "DeFi" for "Decentralized Finance", but its dirty little secret is that it's really "Deregulated Finance".
And who exactly is behind this master plan? Obviously not the government. Republicans? The Bilderberg Group? The Rothschilds? The illuminati? The new world order? Aliens?
It seems more to me to just be a tool that some hackers cobbled together, and it just kind of took on a life of its own. Not too dissimilar from Linux. Satoshi Nakomoto appears to be more of an accounting guru familiar with various existing types of ledgers and limited engineering background (I didn't read his original code, but most contri