Sam Bankman-Fried headed to US after extradition from Bahamas

FTX founder faces eight criminal charges, including for fraud, conspiracy and money-laundering

Sam Bankman-Fried, the jailed founder of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, has been extradited to the United States, where he faces criminal charges, Bahamian authorities said.

Reporters on the scene witnessed Bankman-Fried leaving a magistrate court in Nassau in a dark SUV earlier on Wednesday. The vehicle was later seen arriving at a private airfield by Nassau’s airport, from which he is expected to be flown to the United States. He is due to land in New York and will probably appear in front of a US judge on Thursday.

After several days of conflicting signals from Bankman-Fried’s US and Bahamian legal teams, the disgraced crypto king appeared in court in Nassau to inform a magistrate judge of his decision.

At the hearing Bankman-Fried consented to extradition to the US. Reuters reported that his lawyer read an affidavit in which Bankman-Fried said that he had decided to agree to extradition in part out of a “desire to make the relevant customers whole”.

“The Bahamas has determined that the provisional arrest and subsequent written consent by [Bankman-Fried] to be extradited without formal extradition proceedings satisfies the requirements of the [extradition treaty between the US and the Bahamas] and our nation’s Extradition Act,” said the Bahamian attorney general, Ryan Pinder, in a statement.

After the hearing, Bankman-Fried was set to be transferred to US custody and returned to the US to be arraigned in criminal fraud charges connected to FTX’s dramatic collapse.

The US attorney’s office for the southern district of New York charged Bankman-Fried, 30, with eight criminal counts, including fraud, conspiracy and money-laundering offenses – including making illegal political contributions.

The 30-year-old could potentially spend the rest of his life in jail.

In a series of sometimes rambling media interviews, Bankman-Fried has said he did not plan to commit fraud and was not aware of what was going on at Alameda Research, a hedge fund he founded that allegedly received billions in customers funds from FTX.

Federal prosecutors hinted strongly last week that some members of the FTX-Alameda team in the Bahamas had become government witnesses. “This was not a case of mismanagement or poor oversight, but of intentional fraud, plain and simple,” US attorney Damian Williams said last week.

Williams said Bankman-Fried’s wrongdoing included “fraud on customers, investors, lenders and our campaign finance system”.

Bankman-Fried’s return to the US resolves what has appeared to be a conflict between his US and Bahamian legal teams. At a chaotic hearing in Nassau on Monday, Jerone Roberts, Bankman-Fried’s Bahamas lawyer, told a judge he did not know the reason for the proceedings.

After speaking with both sets of lawyers, Bankman-Fried reportedly agreed to extradition.

“He’s waiving extradition to curry favor with the government, whether it’s via a deal in order to save the government from spending potentially years trying to extradite him, or he’s trying to cooperate,” said Jeffrey Lichtman, a defense attorney who has been involved in a number of high-profile criminal defense cases, including that of the drug boss Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

“If he’s waiving extradition,” Lichtman added, “he’s not going to trial. That’s not exactly a surprise in a case like this because he may not have a defense. In a case where the fraud is plain and easy to prove, it may not go to trial so he’s very possibly looking to get the best deal he can.”

In Lichtman’s view, Bankman-Fried is likely to try to cooperate but the government may not want him, given that as founder and chief executive officer of FTX, he is at the top of the fraud scheme it has alleged.

Bankman-Fried’s initial defense lawyer, Paul Weiss, resigned two weeks ago saying he could not represent the talkative defendant, saying his “incessant and disruptive tweeting” was making the task impossible.

Bankman-Fried was denied bail on Friday after a Bahamian judge ruled that he posed a flight risk. The founder and former CEO of FTX, once worth tens of billions of dollars on paper, was being held in the Bahamas’ Fox Hill prison, which has been cited by human rights activists as having poor sanitation and being infested with rats and insects.

Once he is back in the US, Bankman-Fried’s attorney will be able to request that he be released on bail.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Contributor

Edward Helmore and agencies

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Ex-crypto mogul Sam Bankman-Fried out on $250m bail after extradition from Bahamas
FTX founder must remain under strict supervision at parents’ California home, judge says

Edward Helmore in New York and Alex Hern in London

22, Dec, 2022 @6:57 PM

Article image
Sam Bankman-Fried’s $40m Bahamas penthouse reportedly up for sale
Entrepreneur at center of FTX scandal put luxury residence up for sale the same day crypto exchange filed for bankruptcy

Edward Helmore

14, Nov, 2022 @7:17 PM

Article image
FTX ally warned authorities days before Bankman-Fried arrest
Ryan Salame told the Bahamian securities commission that funds were being used improperly

Alex Hern

15, Dec, 2022 @1:24 PM

Article image
Five things we know about the collapse of FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried
Company founder was arrested and charged with running a ‘house of cards’ in ‘one of the biggest financial frauds in US history’

Lauren Aratani

13, Dec, 2022 @9:58 PM

Article image
FTX chief Sam Bankman-Fried says he ‘screwed up’ but rejects fraud claim
Disgraced chief executive tells summit he ‘didn’t knowingly commingle funds’ with FTX’s sister company Alameda Research

Edward Helmore and Adam Gabbatt in New York

01, Dec, 2022 @1:52 PM

Article image
FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried charged with defrauding investors
SEC says investigation into other alleged misconduct by former CEO of cryptocurrency exchange is ongoing

Dominic Rushe in Washington, Kari Paul in Oakland, Alex Hern in London and Edward Helmore in New York

13, Dec, 2022 @11:08 PM

Article image
FTX assets worth $3.5bn held by Bahamas securities regulator
Authority says it is holding digital assets until they can be returned to creditors and former customers

Dan Milmo Global technology editor

30, Dec, 2022 @12:07 PM

Article image
Sam Bankman-Fried pleads not guilty in FTX case
Crypto exchange founder accused of using deposits to support hedge fund, buy real estate and make political contributions

Edward Helmore and agencies

03, Jan, 2023 @7:19 PM

Article image
FTX billionaire Sam Bankman-Fried funneled dark money to Republicans
The crypto entrepreneur was thought to be a big donor to Democrats but now acknowledges he gave equally to GOP

Dominic Rushe

30, Nov, 2022 @5:20 PM

Article image
Fraud, cons and Ponzi schemes: did Sam Bankman-Fried use Madoff tactics?
The fallen crypto mogul is fighting off accusations he followed a similar playbook to Madoff – and deceived investors in the process

Edward Helmore

17, Dec, 2022 @7:00 AM