USA v. Samuel Bankman-Fried Court Filing, retrieved on March 15, 2024 is part of HackerNoonâs Legal PDF Series. You can jump to any part in this filing here. This part is 31 of 33.
II. The Court Should Order Forfeiture
The Court should impose the proposed forfeiture money judgment. This number is derived as follows: First, the Court should direct the forfeiture of $8,000,000,000, which is a conservative estimate of the proceeds of the defendantâs wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud on FTXâs customers, and the property involved in his conspiracy to launder the proceeds of that wire fraud. As funds that the defendant obtained through false statements and promises, and then misappropriated, they are plainly âproceedsâ pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(1)(C). See Bonventre, 646 F. Appâx at 90 (calculating forfeiture based on âan amount representing the total client investmentâ); United States v. Kenner, 443 F. Supp. 3d 354, 378 (E.D.N.Y. 2020) (defining proceeds forfeiture as amount âreceived . . . as a result of the fraud.â). The total of $8 billion also represents property involved in the defendantâs money laundering. The reason FTX had such a deficit was that the defendant and his co-conspirators had agreed to launder those funds to and through Alameda.
Second, the Court should direct the forfeiture of $1,300,000,000, which represents the proceeds of the defendantâs wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud on Alamedaâs lenders. This sum represents the amount that Alameda owed lenders to whom it had defrauded by making false statements about its balance sheet, calculated as of the date of the bankruptcy filing. (GX1014).
Third, the Court should direct the forfeiture of $1,720,000,000, which represents the proceeds of the defendantâs securities fraud. This sum is the amount FTX raised from investors in exchange for equity on fraudulent pretenses. (GX-26 (listing the total amounts invested in the Series B, B-1, and C round investments in FTX.com)).
The defendant, however, asserts that he owes no forfeiture because âcustomers and creditors will receive a return of their funds via the bankruptcy.â (Def. Mem. at 88). This argument is factually unsupported and legally wrong. Starting with the facts, as discussed above, it is far from certain that FTX customers and lenders will be made whole, and the bankruptcy will almost certainly not cover losses by FTXâs equity investors (the victims of the conspiracy to commit security fraud), which were approximately $1.72 billion.
As a matter of law, there is no basis for reducing the forfeiture judgment based on repayment to victims in bankruptcy. For money laundering based forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. § 982(a)(1), there is no suggestion in the forfeiture statutes that repayment to victims could reduce the judgment. Indeed, Section 982(a)(1) contemplates the opposite, since it is based on the âproperty involvedâ in the money laundering. See United States v. Elfgeeh, 515 F.3d 100, 139 (2d Cir. 2008) (for money transmitting offense, which similarly applies Section 982(a)(1) for forfeiture, affirming judgment for total amount transmitted even though there are no victims); United States v. Waked Hatum, 969 F.3d 1156, 1164 (11th Cir. 2020) (in money laundering case where victims suffered no loss, affirming forfeiture judgment of total sum of laundered money, because âthe governmentâs interest in the [laundered property] vests âthe momentâ such property is launderedâ). The same is true for wire fraud based forfeiture. While the defendant asserts that the proper measure of forfeiture here is the net proceeds under Section 981(a)(2)(B), rather than gross proceeds under Section 981(a)(2)(A), (Def. Mem. at 87-88), he is wrong. As the trial record showed, the defendant embezzled billions of dollars of FTX customer funds, and induced investors to part with money based on false statements. That is âinherently unlawfulâ conduct and therefore the gross proceeds rule under Section 981(a)(2)(A) applies. See United States v. Bodouva, 853 F.3d 76, 80 (2d Cir. 2017) (Section 981(a)(2)(A) applies to embezzlement); Milton, 2024 WL 779210, at *5 (selling securities for which prices have been inflated by âmisleading statementsâ is âmore analogous to cases involving Ponzi schemesâ and thus Section 981(a)(2)(A) applies). And under Section 981(a)(2)(A), the law is clear: âthere is no statutory authorization for an offsetâ even for payments to victims. Bodouva, 853 F.3d at 80.
The single case cited by the defendant for the proposition that return of funds through bankruptcy should offset victim losses is a decade-old, distinguishable decision from the Northern District of Illinois. See United States v. Hollnagel, No. 10 Cr. 195, 2013 WL 5348317 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 24, 2013). There, the district court reduced a forfeiture judgment to zero because the â[d]efendants returned the investorsâ investments over timeâ before their arrests. Id. at *4. Not only did the defendant not return the $8 billion he stole before his arrest, but the Second Circuit has explicitly rejected the reasoning of Hollnagel, under Section 981(a)(2)(B). United States v. Shkreli, 779 F. Appâx 38 (2d Cir. 2019) (summary order). In Shkreli, the Court held that because ââforfeiture is gain basedâ, not based on the losses (or gains) to victims,â a defendant should be required to forfeit âthe total amount invested by investorsâ even if investors were paid back by the defendant during the scheme. Id. at 42 (citing Torres, 703 F.3d at 203).
The defendant next asserts that ânone of the accounts identified for forfeiture were for [his] personal benefit,â âwere not profits âenjoyedâ by [him], but rather maintained on behalf of the companies,â and therefore are not subject to forfeiture. (Def. Mem. at 88). This is legally and factually wrong. While the word âenjoyedâ is found in Hollnagel, the law is clear that the Government can forfeit corporate assets based on a defendantâs crimes when those assets were maintained through and on behalf of a company the defendant âextensively controlsâ or âdominates,â such that âmoney paid to the corporation was effectivelyâ under the defendantâs control. United States v. Peters, 732 F.3d 93, 103-04 (2d Cir. 2013) (forfeiture proceeding under Section 982); United States v. Tartaglione, 15 Cr. 491, 2018 WL 1740532, at *21 (E.D. Pa. Apr. 11, 2018) (same for Section 981), affâd, 815 F. Appâx 648 (3d Cir. 2020). The trial evidence of course established the defendantâs control and dominance of FTX, Alameda, and its affiliated entities.
Finally, the defendant asserts that the Court should order no forfeiture because he âno longer has custody of the accounts identified for forfeiture in the PSRâ since the Government seized the accounts. (Def. Mem. at 88). This is utterly meritlessâthere is no authority even suggesting that the Governmentâs seizure of assets traceable or involved in a defendantâs crimes somehow precludes the Government from seeking forfeiture of the defendantâs interest in those assets. Indeed, the forfeiture laws expressly authorize seizure as part of the forfeiture process. In order for the Government to effect forfeiture of the specific property described in the preliminary order of forfeiture, the Court must first order forfeiture of the defendantâs interests in that specific property. United States v. Daugerdas, 892 F.3d 545, 549 (2d Cir. 2018) (âAt stage one of [forfeiture process], before entering a preliminary order of forfeiture, the court is directed to adjudicate the governmentâs interest vis-Ă -vis the defendantâ). Only once the Court has forfeited the defendantâs rights in the property can the Court move on to âstage two,â by âresolv[ing] any third-party petitionerâs interests vis-Ă -vis the defendant.â Id. If no third-party has a cognizable interest in the property superior to the defendantâs, then the specific property can be finally forfeited to the Government.
In the preliminary order of forfeiture, the Government lists specific property beyond that listed in the forfeiture allegations in the S6 Indictment and the bill of particulars. (Dkt. 314).[14] That specific property is all forfeitable as proceeds of the defendantâs wire frauds or as property involved in money laundering. The property listed in Ex. A(1) is another account in the name of Emergent Fidelity Technologies, which was seized at the same time and pursuant to the same legal authority as the property listed in the S6 Indictment ¶¶ 38(a), (b), 40(a), (b). Ex. A(2)-(255) are the specific forms of cryptocurrency maintained in the Binance accounts described in S6 Indictment ¶¶ 38(h), (i), (j), 40(h), (i), (j). Ex. A(258) is a bank account in the name of the defendant and another FTX employee, which received transfers from the account at Silvergate Bank in the name of Alameda ending in -4456, which as described in Government Exhibit 1050 accepted customer fiat deposits.
The Government also seeks to forfeit the defendantâs interests in certain contributions traceable to his criminal conduct that he, Salame, and Singh made to political candidates and committees, during the relevant period. Beginning in March 2023, the Government, working with the United States Marshals Service and the FBI, sent letters to those candidates and committees who the Government had identified had received donations from the defendant, Salame, and Singh, requesting return of the donations as forfeitable property, and because the donations were illegal. As of today, 251 candidates and committees have returned $3,348,957.23. [15] The Preliminary Order of Forfeiture lists the identified campaigns, including those that have returned funds to the Government, in Ex. A(259) to (261). As evidenced at trial, the defendantâs interests in the political donations are forfeitable because the donations were made using the proceeds of the defendantâs wire fraud on customers and were themselves manifestation of his money laundering. (GX-1039; 1044; 1088; 1089; 1090).
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[14] The airplanes listed at Ex. A(256) and (257) are the property listed in the bill of particulars.
[15] The Government is also coordinating with the FTX Debtors, so that the estate retrieves some of the political contributions. In some circumstances, a political candidate or committee has sought to or did return funds to the estate rather than the Government. As of today, the Government understands that the estate has received $281,356 from 8 candidates and committees.
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