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Unchained

SBF Trial, Day 17: Closing Arguments Ask: ‘Villain or Good-Faith Actor?’

Unchained

Laura Shin

Tech News, Business News, News

4.61.3K Ratings

🗓️ 2 November 2023

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Prosecutors and defense attorneys in the trial of former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried closed their arguments with similar stories to their opening statements more than three weeks ago: a tale of two Sams. On Wednesday morning, day 17 of the trial, the government took jurors on a final grand tour of Bankman-Fried’s alleged lies, evasions and misdirections that they said aimed to hide the ugly truth of a gaping $8 billion hole in the crypto exchange’s balance sheet from investors and regulators, and that reflected his indifference to spending customer assets.  Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicholas Roos said that as the person overseeing FTX and the separate trading entity, Alameda Research, to which FTX funneled customer deposits, Bankman-Fried was the only person who could have been responsible for decisions that led to the deficit – criminally so. “He told a story and he lied to you,” said Roos, who punctuated his more than two-hour presentation with metadata readings and time tables that seemed to devastatingly illustrate SBF’s ongoing awareness of his company’s financial debacle. But in the afternoon, Bankman-Fried’s defense team portrayed him in softer tones, as a math nerd with no ill-intent and guilty only of bad management, particularly his failure to install adequate risk management protections. Attorney Mark Cohen said that the government had failed to prove its case as it sought to create a Hollywood villain responsible for the disappearance of the funds, cartooning his dress and personal habits to make their case. At one point, he seemed to appeal to jurors’ emotions, reminding them that Bankman-Fried had lived a big life and now faces prison. Bankman-Fried faces potentially decades in prison on a total of seven counts of wire fraud and conspiracy. The prosecution will have an opportunity for rebuttal on Thursday, and jurors could begin deliberating his fate before the end of the day..  Often raising his voice for dramatic effect, Roos highlighted earlier testimony from Bankman-Fried’s inner circle and Google metadata indicating his awareness of the balance sheet woes to show his involvement in the company’s oversight. Bankman-Fried testified on Monday that he was unaware of the problems, suggesting others were to blame.  And Roos used the time tables to demonstrate separately that Bankman-Fried had lied to Congress about protecting customer assets even as he paid off loans using them, and that he had spent heavily on investments, political contributions and personal items, even after he knew of the massive balance sheet hole.  “This was a pyramid of deceit built by the defendant on a foundation of lies and false promises, all to get money, and eventually it collapsed, leaving countless victims in its wake,” Roos thundered. Visit UnchainedCrypto.com for prior episodes Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you by Kraken.

0:03.0

Crypto is like finance, but different.

0:06.6

It doesn't care when you invest, trade or save, do it on weekends or at 5 a.m. or on

0:12.7

Christmas day at 5 a.m.

0:15.2

Crypto is finance for everyone, everywhere, all the time.

0:19.5

Visit Kraken.com slash see what crypto can be, to learn more.

0:23.0

Don't invest unless you're prepared to lose all the money you invest.

0:25.7

This is a high-risk investment and you should not expect to be protected if something

0:28.9

goes wrong.

0:33.9

Hi everyone, thanks for tuning in today's 17 of the Unchained recap of the ASVF trial.

0:39.0

On Wednesday, the government and the defense made starkly contrasting closing arguments

0:43.0

in the criminal trial of former FTX CEO Sam Pinkman-Freed.

0:47.3

Assistant US Attorney Nicholas Rose used new evidence, timelines, and the defendant's

0:51.9

own words to paint a picture of SPF as a liar, who stole and whose secretive actions

0:57.6

belied his public statements, which Rose asserted was an indication of his guilt.

1:03.0

Defense attorney Mark Cohen focused more attention on discrediting the government and

1:06.9

the cooperating witnesses, while emphasizing the high bar that must be reached for the

1:10.7

jury to conflict on each of the charges.

1:13.5

In a decidedly less frenzied courthouse compared to the crowds that had appeared for Bank

1:17.4

Fund Feet's testimony, the jury sat late for an extra 90 minutes, with court letting

1:21.9

out after 6 p.m. when it was dark.

1:25.8

Rose, who was tall and has a robust voice and a slightly protrusion way of speaking,

...

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