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Read previewSam Bankman-Fried is maintaining his vegan diet in jail, but it's not going very well. Carmine Simpson, an ex-NYPD officer behind bars with Bankman-Fried, wrote a letter to US District Judge Lewis Kaplan where he pleaded for leniency on Bankman-Fried's behalf. Kaplan is set to sentence Bankman-Fried on March 28, months after the FTX founder was found guilty of seven counts of fraud and conspiracy in November. First photo of Sam Bankman-Fried in jail at MDC Brooklyn. Representatives for Bankman-Fried did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider sent outside regular business hours.
Persons: , Sam Bankman, it's, Carmine Simpson, Lewis Kaplan, Kaplan, Sam, Simpson, Fried, Marc Mukasey, Joseph Bankman, Barbara Fried, Tiffany Fong, He's, I've, Fong Organizations: Service, ex, Business, MDC Brooklyn, Bankman, Business Insider
Tiffany Fong uploaded a photo of what appears to be a scruffy-looking Sam Bankman-Fried to X. The content creator said she got the photo from an inmate and ex-gang member called "G Lock." Disgraced FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried looks a lot scruffier in prison, according to a photo obtained by crypto influencer Tiffany Fong. AdvertisementFirst photo of Sam Bankman-Fried in jail at MDC Brooklyn. (December 17, 2023) pic.twitter.com/QlENjjmeQG — Tiffany Fong (@TiffanyFong_) February 20, 2024Fong said she'd obscured the faces of the other inmates for privacy reasons.
Persons: Tiffany Fong, Sam Bankman, Fong, Fried, G, He's, I've, Lewis Kaplan, he'd Organizations: MDC Brooklyn, Bankman, Metropolitan Detention Center, of Prisons, Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention, Business Insider Locations: Brooklyn, Manhattan, Brooklyn's
Documents revealed by the New York Times shed light on Sam Bankman-Fried's mindset after his arrest. In a Twitter thread he never published, SBF called himself "one of the most hated people in the world." The documents also show Bankman-Fried blaming a lack of hedging by Caroline Ellison for Alameda's collapse. "I'm broke and wearing an ankle monitor and one of the most hated people in the world," Bankman-Fried wrote in an unpublished draft of a Twitter thread written after he was arrested late last year. The 250-pages of documents were shared with the New York Times by crypto influencer Tiffany Fong.
Persons: Sam Bankman, SBF, Caroline Ellison, Fried, I'm, Tiffany Fong, Katy Perry, Rihanna, Sam Trabucco, Trabucco, FTX, Ellison Organizations: New York Times, Service, Alameda Hedge Fund, Times, Alameda, Bankman Locations: Wall, Silicon, Alameda, Brooklyn
It's time to chill with al the recession talk
  + stars: | 2023-02-06 | by ( Allison Morrow | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +8 min
New York CNN —In 2021, a bunch of economists and policy makers underestimated the inflation that was taking root around the world. In 2022, as inflation hit 40-year-highs and the Fed ramped up interest rates, many of those commentators went full-on gloomy — predicting a recession was all but inevitable. And that makes it hard, if not impossible, to imagine a recession anytime soon. “Any concern the economy is in recession or close to a recession should be completely dashed by these numbers,” Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi told CNN on Friday. “The economy is further away from recession than ever,” wrote Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at Fwdbonds.
Sam Bankman-Fried's parents lease the land for their home from Stanford, the LA Times reports. They'd put up the $4 million home as collateral for the former FTX CEO's $250 million bail release. Bail terms are about flight-risk rather than if collateral can cover the full amount, legal experts said. The revelation once again prompts questions about how and why courts set bail terms, which are meant to ensure that a defendant doesn't flee while awaiting trial. Prosecutors are now also arguing that Bankman-Fried's bail restrictions must go further, and impose limits on whom he communicates with and how.
Business partners turn on Sam Bankman-Fried
  + stars: | 2022-12-26 | by ( Allison Morrow | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
Last week, as FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried was being extradited to the United States from the Bahamas, two of his former business partners pleaded guilty to multiple charges of fraud and conspiracy. “I am truly sorry for what I did,” Ellison told the court. She and Bankman-Fried were close business associates who briefly dated. Bankman-Fried, 30, appeared Thursday in a US courtroom in New York, where a federal judge released him on a $250 million bond. Following his court appearance, Bankman-Fried was spotted in a business class lounge at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport.
FTX cofounder Sam Bankman-Fried was seen at JFK Airport in a business class lounge on Thursday. Litquidity tweeted pictures of the former CEO before he boarded a flight to San Francisco. Bankman-Fried was released on a $250 million bond while awaiting trial. The cofounder and former CEO of collapsed crypto trading platform FTX was released on a $250 million bond on Thursday. Litquidity tweeted pictures of Bankman-Fried at JFK on Thursday.
WASHINGTON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - The Democratic Party's three top campaign groups are preparing to return over $1.1 million they have received from imprisoned cryptocurrency tycoon Sam Bankman-Fried, they said on Friday. In a statement, the Democratic National Committee said it was setting aside $815,000 in funds received from Bankman-Fried in light of "potential campaign finance violations" made by the billionaire. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said it was setting aside $103,000, and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which oversees the party's campaign arm for the House of Representatives, said it would set aside $250,000. Bankman-Fried said his pro-Republican outlays have not been disclosed to the public, an area of campaign finance known as "dark money." The Washington Post first reported on the campaign groups' decision to set aside the funds.
WASHINGTON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - The Democratic Party's three top campaign groups are preparing to return over $1.1 million they have received from imprisoned cryptocurrency tycoon Sam Bankman-Fried, they said on Friday. In a statement, the Democratic National Committee said it was setting aside $815,000 in funds received from Bankman-Fried in light of "potential campaign finance violations" made by the billionaire. The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said it was setting aside $103,000, and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which oversees the party's campaign arm for the House of Representatives, said it would set aside $250,000. Bankman-Fried said his pro-Republican outlays have not been disclosed to the public, an area of campaign finance known as "dark money." The Washington Post first reported on the campaign groups' decision to set aside the funds.
An ethics watchdog group has asked the Federal Election Commission to investigate former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried for alleged "serious violations" of election law, citing his admitted contributions of "dark" money to Republican-aligned groups during the 2022 primary season. Anyone can file a complaint with the FEC if they suspect a violation of federal election campaign laws. The complaint contains a link to the Nov. 16 interview Bankman-Fried gave to Tiffany Fong, who posted the discussion on her YouTube channel. "All my Republican donations were dark," Bankman-Fried went on to say, the complaint noted. In the interview, Bankman-Fried said that those contributions were "all for the primary."
But the FTX founder said he gave just as much to Republicans using "dark money." He said he did so to avoid media criticism from "liberal" reporters who would "freak the f*** out." "I've been their third-biggest Republican donor this year as well," he said. "They're all secretly liberal and I didn't want to have that fight, so I made all the Republican ones dark." Once the richest person under 30 with a net worth of $26 billion, Bankman-Fried told Axios on Monday that he's now down to his last $100,000.
The recording was provided by Tiffany Fong, who says she is one of the 500,000 Celsius customers with funds locked in the platform. In the recording, Celsius co-founder Nuke Goldstein outlines a compensation plan for customers who deposited assets in Celsius' "Earn" account, for which Celsius had promised yields as high as 17%. The tokens represent the ratio between what Celsius owes customers and what assets they have available. Celsius also intends to allow customers to redeem these tokens, according to Goldstein. He said the tokens can be redeemed on Celsius for a value likely less than what they are owed or on crypto platforms like Uniswap, allowing the market to determine the tokens' value.
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