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The Almighty Buck Bitcoin

FTX Says Bankman-Fried Took $2.2 Billion (nymag.com) 39

Liquidators at FTX said that founder Sam Bankman-Fried had received $2.2 billion in "loans and payments" while he was allegedly running a massive fraud at the crypto exchange. From a report: According to FTX's bankruptcy court filing, Bankman-Fried got more than $2 billion in loans -- primarily through Alameda Research, the hedge fund he founded that lost big on bad investments, then misused customer deposits from FTX accounts in an attempt to cover those losses. Bankman-Fried wasn't the only executive-roommate to be paid via Alameda: Former director of engineering Nishad Singh got $587 million, co-founder Gary Wang got $246 million, former co-CEO Ryan Salame got $87 million, and former Alameda co-CEO John Samuel Trabucco got $25 million. Caroline Ellison, Bankman-Fried's ex-girlfriend and ex-CEO at Alameda, was more frugal, receiving just $6 million in loans and payments. New management at FTX was careful to note that the $3.2 billion that FTX's and Alameda's top earners essentially lent themselves does not include the $240 million they spent on luxury property in the Bahamas or the political donations given directly by FTX.
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FTX Says Bankman-Fried Took $2.2 Billion

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  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Thursday March 16, 2023 @07:23PM (#63376867)

    Show folks how it works when you want to be an greedy asshole.

    • too easy... Send him to ADX Florence - he can live in a 10x10 concrete box with no visitors for the rest of his life.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by zenlessyank ( 748553 )

        I ain't paying for that shit. Bullets are cheap.

        Our society is too soft. It is time to start making folks pay for their evil.

        • Our society is too soft. It is time to start making folks pay for their evil.

          You're advocating for murder, and you think it's the other folks who are evil?

          • Once you commit a crime, the punishment is not judged. You need to rethink your deduction.

            • Once you commit a crime, the punishment is not judged.

              Whether it goes before a judge doesn't change whether it fits the description, which is to say a premeditated killing. It's also not necessary, so there's no excuse. You're just bloodthirsty.

      • Why would you? He poses no national threat in case of evasion or communication with the external world. Decades in a regular prison is unpleasant enough for a kid who wasted his opportunity to life of lust and luxury that he had for granted just by the virtue of his birth. Not only the realization of his wasted life opportunities is unpleasant, but also the enormous mental strain and constant risk of being stabbed by some violent criminal who doesn't like rich kids, or who doesn't like Jews, or just because

        • Why would you?

          If you get rid of a criminal, they'll never criminal again.

          • I was commenting on why would you send him to a Supermax jail rather than a normal jail. The "bullet" comment was another one.

          • If you get rid of a criminal, they'll never criminal again.

            By extension, we should just kill everyone, since they will certainly commit a crime sometime in the future [amazon.com] and that would ensure that they won't.

          • That would go against the three founding principles of penal justice as identified by Cesare Beccaria (On Crimes and Punishments, 1764):
            1) principle of legality, penalties must be defined in law before being applied -- other way to say no *arbitrary* punishments;
            2) principle of necessity, the action of justice must be strictly limited to the necessary, and it is almost never* needed to physically kill someone to make sure they will not commit other crimes -- the same principle applies to all government acti

            • stealing money is a much lesser crime than murder

              Bernie Madoff got 150years in prison for financial crimes. That's a life sentence no matter how you slice it. Meanwhile - this guy who committed first degree murder is getting out on parole: https://www.the-dispatch.com/n... [the-dispatch.com]

      • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

        by sg_oneill ( 159032 )

        Lol he's gonna get 8 years and out in 4.

        *Working class* people get the whole "40 years in jail for stealing 3 slices of pizza" treatment the US is notorious for.

        Rich people get a slap on the wrist. And told they are a naughty boy and have to sit in the corner for a few weeks while their new job in wall street is prepared.

        • Which is why I say get rid of all the lawyers. They dont help the working class. Just the rich, elite, and political classes. Level the playing field. Give the super elite and rich crappy-ass public defenders.
  • Nice to see how diverse the fraudsters are and that they are all humans and full of mistakes and greed. No matter the identity, creed or polycule we belong to, we all just want to make a greedy, easy buck. None of you are special snowflakes.

  • ~$6 million to Caroline Ellison

    She really was getting fucked!

    • Re:Only $6M? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Thursday March 16, 2023 @09:16PM (#63377091)

      ~$6 million to Caroline Ellison

      She really was getting fucked!

      I suspect this had more to do with risk tolerance on her part.

      Note this wasn't intended as straight theft, but rather a loan (that they never should have been given).

      Basically, the plan was they borrow a big pile of money from the company, invest it, and then when the investments go up they pay off the loan while keeping the extra.

      Problem is they were crap investors who lost all the money and since loan was unsecured so the company (ie depositors) lost their money.

      It sounds like they allowed themselves to borrow at will, so I think she was just a bit less comfortable than the others taking out the super-giant loans.

      • Apparently my joke crashed. I was commenting on the multiple-partner lifestyle she and her colleagues adopted.

        • Apparently my joke crashed. I was commenting on the multiple-partner lifestyle she and her colleagues adopted.

          Oh don't worry I caught that.

          Not saying the joke didn't crash, but I caught it nonetheless :P

      • They borrowed at will and invested the money in a way that would either make them really rich or they would bankrupt themselves and the FTX "depositors." At that point, there's no reason not to go big. How would she possibly pay back $6M? OnlyFans? It doesn't seem like there was any thought process here at all.
        • They borrowed at will and invested the money in a way that would either make them really rich or they would bankrupt themselves and the FTX "depositors." At that point, there's no reason not to go big. How would she possibly pay back $6M? OnlyFans? It doesn't seem like there was any thought process here at all.

          She probably couldn't pay back the full $6m, but most investments don't poof completely. If her portfolio lost 10% she's only down $600k, it sucks but it's not insurmountable for a CEO of an investment firm.

          There's also the fact of the effect on the firm itself. Borrowing hundreds of millions or even billions does seriously jeopardize the health of the firm. Borrowing $6m? If the other execs did the same the firm might not have collapsed.

          Not saying it isn't jail-worthy, but it's not nearly the same level as

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by DavenH ( 1065780 )
      When you sum a few positive numbers together, one of them being 2.2B, you get a bigger number, 3.2B, what is hard about this?
  • by Kelxin ( 3417093 ) on Thursday March 16, 2023 @07:46PM (#63376921)
    That's bank man is fried.
  • Surely with all the FATCA, KYC, anti-fraud, anti-tax-evasion, and anti-money-laundering laws and policies in the banking system, those billions had to go somewhere obvious.

    • None of those laws applied to crypto-currency. Now they sure as hell will in the future though.

    • If he was smart, he bought xmr.

    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      US regulations are not good at forcing private companies to impose effective internal controls on money very early. (Public companies are required to use recognized auditors.) Accountants and auditors can tell you at tear-inducing length what FTX should have been doing, and it wasn't approving expenses with emoji on Slack. But FTX had boatloads of other people's money, and a bunch of corrupt and/or grossly negligent people, so it took a while for their misdeeds to catch up with them.

      FTX had an auditor, b

  • I was just trying to figure out how much of my crypto currency 'investments' could have ended up in SBF's hidden pockets. Then I remembered that I don't have any crypto 'investments' ....

Lots of folks confuse bad management with destiny. -- Frank Hubbard

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