- Detention follows investigation in FTX’s implosion last month
- He faces extradition to the US, the Bahamas said on Monday
Bankman-Fried is being held in custody pending an extradition process, the island nation’s attorney general, Ryan Pinder, said in a statement Monday.
Federal prosecutors in Manhattan plan to unseal the case against him Tuesday morning, “and will have more to say at that time,”
The Securities and Exchange Commission separately authorized civil charges relating to Bankman-Fried’s violations of securities laws, Enforcement Director
Bankman-Fried has been facing investigations in the US and the Bahamas, where FTX was headquartered, into a range of possible misconduct. One key inquiry has been whether customer funds were lent out to trading firm
‘Powerful Evidence’
“To indict this early, when they didn’t have to, tells me that they have incredibly powerful evidence,” said
The White House declined to comment on the arrest and charges.
House Financial Services Committee Chairwoman
Bankman-Fried, 30, is being held at the Cable Beach police station in Nassau, according to an officer working at the facility. The person, who declined to give a name when reached by phone, said that all the cells there are comfortable, but didn’t provide details.
The facility is about 13 miles from the Albany Bahamas luxury community where Bankman-Fried lives and is located close to a main tourist zone.
Bankman-Fried’s arraignment is scheduled for Tuesday, according to a person familiar with the matter.
In media interviews since FTX’s collapse, Bankman-Fried has admitted major managerial missteps, but has also claimed that he never tried to commit fraud or break the law.
In his remarks prepared for the US House hearing that Bankman-Fried was scheduled to appear at on Tuesday, he offered a blunt assessment of his plight.
“I would like to start by formally stating under oath: I f—-ked up,” Bankman-Fried said in draft copy of his remarks obtained by Bloomberg News.
He added that the company’s new managers, led by restructuring expert
Crypto Exchanges
Prior to the arrest and long before his empire collapsed into bankruptcy, federal prosecutors in Manhattan had already been looking into FTX as part of broader sweep of exchanges and potential anti-money laundering violations under the Bank Secrecy Act.
The investigation, led by the Complex Frauds and Cybercrime Unit, took a different trajectory after FTX’s catastrophic implosion.
Prosecutors were closely examining whether hundreds of millions of dollars were improperly transferred to the Bahamas around the time of FTX’s Nov. 11 bankruptcy filing in Delaware, according to a person familiar with the matter.
They were also digging into whether FTX broke the law by transferring funds to
Last week, prosecutors, the FBI, Department of Justice officials and FTX’s new CEO and restructuring expert Ray met at SDNY’s headquarters in downtown Manhattan. Potential charges were not discussed at that meeting, according to a person familiar with the conversation.
(Updates with former federal prosecutor’s comments in the sixth paragraph.)
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stacy-marie ishmael, Misyrlena Egkolfopoulou
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