‘This is a joke,’ Judge Kaplan scolds lawyers: SBF trial live updates

Professor Peter Easton kicked off Wednesday’s trial, with the prosecution telling the court they plan to wrap their case by next week

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Artwork by Crystal Le

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FTX co-founder Sam Bankman-Fried faces seven federal charges in a criminal trial taking place in Manhattan. The former crypto exchange exec is accused of misappropriating billions of dollars of customer funds for real estate, donations, political contributions and investments. 

The current state of play: The prosecution only has a couple more witnesses lined up, and it’s not clear if the defense will make a case. A new witness, professor Peter Easton, is expected to take the stand today. Read more here.


5:40 pm ET: A glimpse at SBF’s pet political causes

The very last government witness to be called Wednesday was Paige Owens, an accountant with the FBI who analyzed thousands of pages of Alameda and FTX bank statements.

The reason? To trace the source of the countless political donations made by Bankman-Fried, Nishad Singh and Ryan Salame. 

When it comes to SBF, Alameda’s Prime Trust account sent seven wires totaling $47 million to his personal Prime Trust account. 

All of these transfers occurred from January 2022 to April 2022. The government claims much of that money ended up in the coffers of Guardians Against Pandemics — a political action committee run by Gabriel Bankman-Fried — Building a Stronger Future, also run by SBF’s brother, and two Democratic PACs including the House Majority PAC.

Read more: Former FTX lawyer ‘shocked’ by missing $7B: SBF trial live updates

Speaking of the Bankman-Fried family, ICYMI, testimony from accounting professor Peter Easton revealed that SBF’s parents, Joe Bankman and Barbara Fried, purchased a $16.4 million property in the Bahamas. The twist here is that the property, Easton testified, was most likely purchased with customer funds — thanks FTX customers!

More wire transfers totaling $16 million were sent to Bankman-Fried from Alameda’s Silvergate account from August 2022 to early October of the same year. Another Democratic PAC was funded with a portion of that money, according to the prosecution. 

Nishad Singh’s political donations were front and center during his testimony. The former FTX head of engineering also received around over $3 million from Alameda and FTX Digital Markets bank accounts. Portions of the multi-million dollar sum ended up with dozens of PACs and campaign funds including the LGBTQ Victory Fund, the Senate Majority PAC and the Iowa Democratic Party.

Singh in February pleaded guilty to seven federal counts, including one count of campaign finance violations. 

The FBI also confirmed that the CEO of FTX Digital Markets, Ryan Salame, had money wired to him to make political donations. Salame pleaded guilty to a campaign finance violation.

The defense confirmed that while the FBI can analyze the bank transfers, the witness couldn’t confirm how the funds made it into the Alameda bank accounts. That was beyond the scope of her investigation. 

Everdell posited it could have been from Alameda trading revenue, rather than what the government may have been implying with Owens’ testimony given all the talk today about how FTX customer money was spent.

Preview of Thursday: Last day of court for this week! Judge Kaplan said there may only be two witnesses, possibly making for an abbreviated trial day. The defense said that they’ll be ready to start, if they choose to put on a case, as soon as next Thursday.

4:05 pm ET: “This is a joke”

Google records custodian Cory Gaddis was called to the stand to testify about metadata in a Google Sheets document tied to SBF’s Google account. 

But the testimony didn’t go to plan. During the cross-examination of Gaddis, the witness admitted to defense attorney Christian Everdell that he was not a metadata expert.

Immediately after Gaddis was excused, the judge scolded both the prosecution and the defense for wasting the jury’s time.

Kaplan added that calling this witness to the stand was “a joke.”

“We have 18 people devoted” to this case, the judge added, referring to the 12 jurors and the six alternates. 

Read more: FTX customer money bought SBF’s parents a $16.4M house in the Bahamas, expert says

Judge Kaplan was further enraged when it was revealed that Gaddis was flown to New York all the way from Texas to testify on a subject that he wasn’t even an expert on. 

“Lawyers are supposed to do better than this, and I’m talking to both sides,” Judge Kaplan said.

There were also three pieces of evidence that prosecutors and the Bankman-Fried’s attorneys debated on including further on in the trial. Some of them were communications between Bankman-Fried and others after the collapse of FTX, and many of the communications had
“swear words.” 

Everdell was quite reticent to say them, but eventually, the judge’s patience wore thin.

“I’ve heard it before,” Kaplan said as Everdell was spelling out a particular naughty word. 

Adding to the mess, Everdell rattled through his list of concerns about the proposed government evidence being prejudicial against Bankman-Fried way, way too fast for the judge.

“I listen to 33 rpm records. Not 45,” the judge told Everdell. For those of you in the younger crowd, Kaplan was referring to the speed at which records are played.

Everdell got the message and slowed down.

Live from the courtroom: Lead Prosecutor Danielle Sassoon had a bit of a mishap during the lunch break. She told the judge that she accidentally walked into a room that the jury was in. 

To avoid any improprieties, she said she “walked right out,” but not before the jurors laughed at her. 

Judge Kaplan chuckled and the defense raised no objections to Sassoon’s brief interaction with the jury other than saying it should be included in the record.

1:10 pm ET: How FTX and Alameda used customer money

After the court took its 15-minute morning break from colored-coded flow charts, bank statements, and emails, accounting professor Peter Easton delved right back in.

The main takeaway: from January 2021 all the way up until FTX’s (and Alameda’s) collapse on Nov. 11, 2022, all of Alameda’s “allow negative”-enabled accounts on the exchange were massively in the red. And despite this woeful state of affairs, it didn’t stop Alameda from paying out billions to meet its obligations. 

And where did those billions in fiat and crypto come from? Roos asked repeatedly.

“Customers,” was Easton’s reliable refrain.

In fact, 68% of Alameda’s third-party loans — worth around $4.5 billion — were paid with FTX customer money, according to Easton’s exhaustive analysis that was commissioned by the government (he’s billed prosecutors in excess of $100,000 so far).

Read more: The biggest winners from the FTX fiasco? The lawyers

Getting more specific, Alameda repaid roughly $3.5 billion to Genesis in loans. $1.7 billion of that was taken from FTX customers, Easton told the court. 

Easton then went through the rest of Alameda’s loan repayments rapid fire. 

BlockFi, Maple, Anchorage: All from customers.

A smattering of other loan repayments were mentioned, and for those, a significant portion came from deposits originally made on FTX.

Keep in mind, this was all done while Alameda’s various trading accounts on FTX had multi-billion dollar negative balances. At the time of the collapse on Nov. 11, 2022, the allow negative accounts had a combined negative balance of $12 billion, according to Easton.

Another tidbit: FTX also funded its $2.2 billion buyout of Binance’s stake in FTX with $1.2 billion from “customers on the FTX exchange,” Easton said. 

Roos appeared to take a stab at preempting the defense’s strategy by asking Easton if Alameda borrowing from the spot margin program on FTX could have contributed largely to the $12 billion negative balance across its accounts.

“It cannot be explained” by that, Easton said at least twice. 

And for the hungry jurors, Roos’s “no further questions” couldn’t have come at a better time. 

After lunch, Bankman-Fried’s defense will cross-examine Easton. Proceedings will resume at 1:45 pm ET.

12:15 pm ET: The $9 billion hole that was never filled

Peter Easton, an accounting professor at Notre Dame took the stand Wednesday morning to explain the extent of the alleged theft of FTX customer and investor funds by Alameda Research. 

But, as it happens when you call an accounting expert to the stand, there are a lot of government exhibits. 

So, prosecutor Nicolas Roos was put in the awkward position of reading out the dozens of exhibits he wanted to publish for the witness and the jury.

Judge Kaplan stared at him with a hand on his cheek and a growing smile as the list grew longer. One juror even raised his hands in frustration, presumably wondering when Roos would quit rattling off numbers. 

Don’t miss a thing from the courtroom. Follow along for all SBF trial coverage.

When Roos was finally done, the judge joked that Roos should read the exhibit numbers backward, eliciting laughs from all corners of the room. 

Roos quipped that these were also his lotto numbers. 

Now, back to Easton, who also delved into the extent of the commingling that occurred between dozens of Alameda and FTX bank accounts as well as Sam Bankman-Fried’s Paper Bird. 

Roos first tackled FTX’s supposed investment in Modulo Capital in May 2022, another trading firm.

According to Easton, “$292 million of customer funds” were used in the investment.

But when Roos asked Easton if customer funds were spent by Alameda, the answer was easy.

“Oh yes,” Easton said.

According to Easton’s testimony, and as demonstrated by a dizzying number of flow charts, $1.1 billion of FTX customer deposits went to Alameda Research between January 4, 2022 and February 11, 2022. 

Much of this was spent on political donations, real estate investments, venture investments and charitable contributions. 

A similar story occurred around February 2022 with Genesis Digital Assets, a bitcoin mining company. Around $145 million worth of customer deposits originally in the North Dimension bank account were siphoned to Alameda Ltd, which then eventually landed with GDA, Easton said on the stand.

The total payment was $550 million and some of it “must have come” from customers, Easton told the jury.

In June 2022, the customer fiat liability hit $11.3 billion, while Alameda and FTX had roughly $2.3 billion for customers to withdraw. Meaning that there was a $9 billion gap in what Alameda and FTX could cover if every customer chose to withdraw their funds.

And then there’s the commingling of funds with enough bank accounts to make your head spin. 

Prosecutors used exhibits to split the bank accounts into four quadrants to make it easier to understand. There were 1) Alameda bank accounts that did not have customer funds, 2) roughly 40 bank accounts that did hold customer funds, 3) FTX bank accounts and 4) SBF’s personal accounts. 

10:15 am ET: New day, new witness

The prosecution only has a few more witnesses left on their docket, now that most of the big players have taken the stand. The court heard from FTX co-founder Gary Wang, former Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison, and FTX’s former head of engineering Nishad Singh. 

Let’s talk about scheduling real quick.

The prosecution told the court that they’re slightly ahead of schedule and could rest their case as soon as next week (oh, and a fun note there: Court will end Thursday and won’t resume until the following Thursday). 

It’s not clear what’s going to happen with the defense, however, or if SBF will even take the stand.

“We are still working through whether we are going to put a case on and, if so, of what nature. But I continue to believe that if we do put on a case, it won’t be more than a week, week and a half at the max,” Cohen told the judge and the prosecutors Tuesday. 

Read more: Hot take: Someone at Alameda was actually good at their job

According to a filing from earlier this week, the defense is concerned about SBF’s Adderall. 

“However, as we approach the defense case and the critical decision of whether Mr. Bankman-Fried will testify, the defense has a growing concern that because of Mr. Bankman-Fried’s lack of access to Adderall he has not been able to concentrate at the level he ordinarily would and that he will not be able to meaningfully participate in the presentation of the defense case,” lawyers for Bankman-Fried wrote.

Starting Thursday, SBF will be given an extended-release dose, and the defense will assess from there.

To end Tuesday, the prosecution brought out FBI Agent Richard Busick who used cell phone analysis to allegedly pinpoint SBF’s whereabouts throughout 2021 and 2022.

And now the prosecution is expected to bring out Professor Peter Easton, an expert in accounting, to, well, go over some numbers. Though, as we’ve seen before, last-minute witness changes happen.

It’s not totally clear what the prosecution plans to focus on with Easton, though — thanks to a discussion between Judge Lewis Kaplan, the prosecution and the defense — his “opinion” on the data he’s analyzed was disclosed.

“His opinion is going to be that the amount in FTX’s cryptocurrency wallets, there was a difference between what was in there and what was reflected in FTX’s database for customer deposits, so the black line meaning this is what the database said we had in customer deposits. What FTX was actually keeping in cryptocurrency balances was considerably smaller,” prosecutor Nicholas Roos told the judge and the defense yesterday.

As for Tuesday’s testimonies: The cross-examination of Singh handed Sam Bankman-Fried and his team a win yesterday. Through questioning, attorney Mark Cohen was able to get Singh to admit that the political donations made in his name were voluntary.

Blockworks reporter Casey Wagner wrote that SBF’s team “came on fairly strong” Tuesday.


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