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 15 of 33.
A. The Evidence at Trial Proved That the Loss Amounts Is at Least $10 Billion
The defendant takes issue with the loss amount as calculated in the PSR. His arguments, however, are entirely meritless and fail to address the facts of this case or the governing law. The evidence at trial proved that the losses to FTX customers are conservatively estimated to be at least $8 billion, the losses to FTX investors are at least $1.7 billion, and the losses to Alameda lenders are at least $1.3 billion. The total actual loss amount from the defendantâs interlocking fraudulent schemes, therefore, is at least in excess of $10 billion.
1. Applicable Law
âLossâ is defined in the Guidelines as âthe greater of actual loss or intended loss.â U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. 3(A). âActual lossâ is defined as âthe reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm that resulted from the offense.â Id., cmt. 3(A)(i). And âreasonably foreseeable pecuniary harmâ is defined as âpecuniary harmââthat is, âharm that is monetary or that otherwise is readily measurable in moneyââthat âthe defendant knew or, under the circumstances, reasonably should have known, was a potential result of the offense.â Id., cmt. 3(A)(iii), (iv)). âIntended lossâ is defined as âthe pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to inflict,â and includes any âintended pecuniary harm that would have been impossible or unlikely to occur.â Id., cmt. 3(A)(ii). The âGuidelines do not require that the sentencing court calculate the amount of loss with certainty or precision.â United States v. Bryant, 128 F.3d 74, 75-76 (2d Cir. 1997). Instead, a court âneed only make a reasonable estimate of the loss,â given the âavailable information.â U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. 3(c)
2. The Trial Evidence Regarding Loss Amount
Here, there are three categories of losses: (1) losses to FTX customers; (2) losses to FTXâs equity investors; and (3) losses to Alamedaâs lenders.
First, the defendantâs fraud on FTX customers resulted in a loss to those customers in excess of $8 billion. This number is calculated by conservatively estimating the total shortfall on the FTX exchange, that is, the amount by which customer account balances exceeded the amount of assets that FTX had available to return to those customers when FTX declared bankruptcy on November 11, 2022. The trial evidence fully supports this amount, which, if anything, is a conservative estimate. For instance, Professor Easton testified that in June 2022, as much as $12.6 billion in customer funds had been misappropriated. (Tr. 1773; GX-1005). Wang testified that in September 2022, it was around $14 billion. (Tr. 450). Ellison also maintained a spreadsheet, which she shared with the defendant in September 2022, showing that Alameda had taken around $13.7 billion from FTX customers. (Tr. 813).
By November 1, 2022, according to Professor Easton, the amount of misappropriated customer funds had been reduced to approximately $9.2 billion. (Tr. 1773; GX-1005). The shortfall decreased in the final days of FTX because the defendant returned some of the money he had misappropriated back to FTX to cover customer withdrawals. The Guidelines provide that the loss amount âshall be reducedâ by the amount of âmoney returned ⌠to the victim before the offense was detected,â U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, cmt. 3I(i).[3] However, even if the defendant is given credit for these pre-bankruptcy returns of funds, the evidence at trial shows that there was still a total shortfall of around $8 billion in customer funds when FTX collapsed. For example, Wang testified that there was still a $8 billion shortfall (Tr. 456-58), and the defendant himself sent a text message on November 7, 2022, in which he acknowledged that there was a shortfall of $8 billion in customer assets that FTX was unable to repay, even if he could liquidate certain Alameda assets (Tr. 2789). Accordingly, the trial evidence fully supports the PSRâs conclusions that customer losses amount to $8 billion.
Second, the evidence at trial clearly supports the PSRâs conclusion that the losses to investors amounted to $1.72 billion, which was the total amount of equity investments in FTX.com that the defendant fraudulently obtained. (GX-26 (listing the total amounts invested in the Series B, B-1, and C round investments in FTX.com)). None of these investors received any return on their investment while FTX was operating, and the equity in FTX is now worthless. Accordingly, the actual loss to investors is the full amount of their investment.
Third, the evidence at trial showed that Alameda obtained approximately $1.7 billion in new loans from May to November 2022, the time period in which the defendant conspired to provide lenders with false financial information to induce them to continue lending. (GX-1014). Of that amount, approximately $1.3 billion were outstanding at the time of bankruptcy. (Id.). Thus, even if the defendant were given credit for pre-bankruptcy returns of funds, the actual loss for the lender fraud is $1.3 billion.
3. The Defendantâs Assertion That the Loss Amount for FTX Customers Is Zero Is Meritless
The defendant does not seriously dispute any of these numbers or the evidence supporting them. Rather, he argues that the actual loss should be estimated at zero based on developments that have happened long after his fraud was exposed and his companies declared bankruptcy. (Def. Mem. at 17-21). The sole basis for the defendantâs argument on loss amount is a statement by counsel for the debtors in the FTX and Alameda bankruptcy proceeding that FTX customers and creditors âwill eventually be paid in full.â See Transcript of Hearing at 18:11-25 (âBankruptcy Transcriptâ), In re FTX Trading Ltd., et al., 22 -11068 (JTD) (Bankr. D. Del. Jan. 31, 2024), Dkt. 6908. The defendantâs arguments relying on that representation, however, are fatally flawed both on the law and the facts.
First, as a legal matter, any potential recovery to victims in the bankruptcy proceeding should not be used to reduce the loss amount for purposes of the Guidelines. Pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(E), there are only two circumstances where it is appropriate for a district court to make âcredits against lossâ: (1) where there are funds returned to victims âbefore the offense was detected,â and (2) in certain cases âinvolving collateral pledged or otherwise provided by the defendant.â Neither of those circumstances applies here. As to the first circumstance, the potential recovery to victims from the bankruptcy did not happen before detection of the fraud. On the contrary, as of this date, nearly a year and a half after FTX declared bankruptcy and months since the defendantâs conviction at trial, his victims have received no recovery and there is no timeline for when any such payments will be made. As to the second circumstance, it plainly does not apply here, as this is not a fraudulent loan case in which the defendant pledged collateral. Rather, this case involved the misappropriation of funds by the defendant, secretly taking money from the FTX exchange and moving it to Alameda, his own investment company, after assuring his customers he would do no such thing. Customers were never pledged any collateral for their FTX deposits. Thus, the plain text of the Guidelines does not provide for any reduction in loss amount based on the possibility that victims will receive compensation in the bankruptcy.
The defendantâs position is contradicted by case law as well. The Second Circuit has held that a defendantâs âarguments that the loss calculation should be offset ⌠by his companyâs bankruptcy filings are unpersuasive,â because the Guidelines only allow for reduction of the loss amount for money returned âbefore the offense was detected.â United States v. Ware, 399 F. Appâx 659, 662 (2d Cir. 2010) (quoting U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. 3(E)(i)); see also United States v. Bergstein, 788 F. Appâx 742, 747 (2d Cir. 2019) (where defendant had misappropriated funds invested in company, affirming district courtâs decision not to reduce the loss amount by the funds subsequently recovered by the company). Thus, the law is clear that the loss amount should not be reduced by âfunds received in bankruptcy after the conspiracy was uncovered, or to the potential value of a future bankruptcy payout.â United States v. Bryson, 101 F. Supp. 3d 147, 157 (D. Conn. 2015).[4]
In his submission, the sole case that the defendant relies on is United States v. Durham, 766 F.3d 672 (7th Cir. 2014), which affirmed a district courtâs calculation of loss amount as the amount owed to investors less the amount recovered in bankruptcy. (Def. Mem. at 19-20). But the defendantâs reliance on Durham is flawed. In Durham, unlike here, the evidence at sentencing did not show exactly how much money the defendants had misappropriated, so the district court relied on the amounts invested by investors minus the amount recovered in bankruptcy as a reasonable proxy for that loss. Id. at 687. The Seventh Circuit merely affirmed the district courtâs methodology as reasonable and did not suggest that as a general rule, loss amount should be reduced by the amount of money recovered in bankruptcy. Indeed, the issue was not even litigated in Durham, because the Guidelines range was not affected by whether or not bankruptcy recoveries were reduced from the loss amount. Id.[5]
The defendantâs argument is also contrary to common sense. In many criminal fraud cases, the combined efforts of the Government and the bankruptcy system are able to achieve substantial recoveries for victims. For instance, the Government recently announced that victims of the Madoff fraud scheme have been repaid at â91% of their fraud losses,â and that efforts to recover funds are ongoing. Press Release, Justice Department Announces Distribution of Over $158.9M to Nearly 25,000 Victims of Madoff Ponzi Scheme (Dec. 11, 2023), available at https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-announces-distribution-over-1589m-nearly25000-victims-madoff-ponzi. But that does not mean that the loss amount calculated at Madoffâs sentencing in 2009 was incorrect, or that the court in that case should have attempted to predict how much money victims would ultimately be able to recover.
Here, as in Madoff and many other cases, the defendant misappropriated funds from his victims and put large amounts of the money into assets such as real estate, stock in publicly traded companies, and other more illiquid assets for his own benefit. Many of those assets are recoverable, and can be liquidated to repay his victims, but that is due to the extensive efforts of the administrators of the bankruptcy proceeding and due to this prosecution, and these recoveries do not affect the appropriate measure of loss for sentencing purposes. As debtorsâ counsel in the bankruptcy recently explained: âHad these Chapter 11 Cases not been filed in November 2022, or had different choices been made in the early months, customers of FTX.com and potentially other FTX creditors would have faced a near total loss.â Fourth Motion of Debtors for Entry of an Order Extending the Exclusive Periods During Which Only the Debtors May File a Chapter 11 Plan and Solicit Acceptances Thereof (âDebtors Motionâ), In re FTX Trading, Ltd., Case No. 22-11068 (JTD) (Bankr. D. Del. Mar. 5, 2024), Dkt. 8621, at 2.
In addition to being legally baseless, the defendantâs argument that the loss to FTX customers should be reduced to zero is premised on a distorted depiction of the bankruptcy proceeding. The defendant seizes on one statement at a recent hearing that âcustomers and general unsecured creditors with allowed claims, will eventually be paid in full.â Transcript of Hearing at 18:11-25, In re FTX Trading Ltd., et al., 22-11068 (JTD) (Bankr. D. Del. Jan. 31, 2024), Dkt. 6908. But he overlooks critical context for that statement. First, the meaning of âpaid in fullâ here is that customers are expected to receive, at some point in the future, â100% of their allowed claims over time, measured at petition time value and subject to agreement by certain governmental creditors to voluntarily subordinate their own very large and impaired claims.â (Debtors Motion at 2).
There is a significant difference between the defendantâs claim that customers will âget back all of their moneyâ (Def. Mem. at 17), and the Debtorsâ more measured statement that it hopes to return â100% of their allowed claims over time.â The example of the two customer witnesses who testified at trial demonstrates this difference. Marc-Antoine Julliard, for instance, transferred the equivalent of about $140,000 in fiat currency to his FTX account in April and May 2022. (Tr. 78). Julliard used his deposits to purchase Bitcoin, and intended to hold Bitcoin for five to ten years. (Tr. 73-74). He purchased the Bitcoin based on the defendantâs false representations that when an FTX customer purchased Bitcoin in the spot market, FTX was holding Bitcoin that the customer could withdraw on demand. (Tr. 80). Julliard used almost all of his deposited funds to purchase three Bitcoin, which were trading around $40,000 at the time of his purchase. (GX425). As of approximately November 11, 2022, FTX was still representing to Julliard that his account contained three Bitcoin, which were then valued at a total of approximately $52,000, or around $17,000 per Bitcoin. (GX-425). This was the lowest price Bitcoin had closed at since November 2020.[6] In fact, however, FTX was not holding any Bitcoin for Julliard, nor was it holding his initial fiat currency deposits of $140,000. Instead, the defendant had used that money, along with the deposits of countless other FTX customers, to fund investments through his private investment company, Alameda.
Similarly, Tareq Morad funded his FTX account with approximately $500,000 in fiat currency. (Tr. 1288). Like Julliard, Morad bought cryptocurrency on the spot market, and simply held those funds. When FTX declared bankruptcy, the company was still falsely representing to Morad that his account held more than two Bitcoin and 86 Ethereum as well as certain other cryptocurrencies, with a total value at the time of $257,000. (GX-539). But due to the defendantâs misappropriation of funds, the company was holding neither the cryptocurrency that Morad had been told he had purchased, nor his initial fiat deposits.
Since FTXâs bankruptcy, cryptocurrency prices have increased. Bitcoin is currently trading at more than $60,000, and Ethereum is trading at nearly $4,000. Thus, if not for the defendantâs fraud, Julliard would currently be holding three Bitcoin that he would be able to withdraw for approximately $180,000, and Morad would be holding cryptocurrency worth well in excess of $400,000. But instead, Julliard and Morad are holding a claim in bankruptcy for the dollar value of their FTX accounts as of the bankruptcy date, which are $52,000 and $257,000, respectively, and have no clear timeline for when those claims will actually be paid. Thus, even if the Debtors are successful in paying â100% of their allowed claims over time,â Julliard and Morad will never get back either the amount of actual fiat money they deposited in FTX nor the cryptocurrency they were falsely told their deposits had been used to purchase. The defendantâs fraud took away these funds from these victims: he left them stuck not with âall of their money,â but with a claim for future receipt of the dollar value of their cryptocurrency as of the time of the bankruptcy petition. Several victim impact statements make this point: the bankruptcy recovery, as currently conceived, will not in their view make them whole.[7] (See, e.g., Victim Impact Statements Nos. 32, 33, 38).
The defendantâs claims about customer recovery additionally lack context because they fail to take into account the substantial efforts undertaken by the bankruptcy estate to recover value for FTX customers. This has included, for example, lawsuits to claw back money given to the defendantâs parents and money invested in K5 for the defendantâs benefit. See Debtorâs Motion at 10-11 (describing efforts undertaken to recover assets, including âsignificant litigation claimsâ). As proven at trial, these funds were customer money that the defendant invested for his own benefit, and the fact that these funds may be recoverable through the bankruptcy proceeding does nothing to reduce the defendantâs culpability. (Tr. 1320-22 (Singh testimony about defendantâs investment of customer funds in K5)).
Thus, the defendant is engaged in nothing more than fanciful speculation when he suggests, without citing any evidence, that FTX could have simply âresumed withdrawals on November 15th after selling sufficient assets to cover the $8 billion.â (Def. Mem. at 18). In the real world, even in March 2024, and after sustained effort by the bankruptcy estate, the company has not yet paid out any customer claims, has not yet been able to recover all the assets misappropriated by the defendant, and has not yet been able to fully liquidate the assets that it has recovered. Similarly, the defendantâs suggestion that FTX was âsolvent as of the date of the bankruptcy petitionâ is contradicted by overwhelming evidence. As noted, the defendant himself circulated internal messages in the days before declaring bankruptcy in which he acknowledged that there was an $8 billion hole in customer deposits that could not be repaid on any short-term time horizon. (Tr. 2789). Even now, the defendant acknowledges that he would have had to suspend FTX withdrawals while he attempted to liquidate assets that he was holding in a separate company, Alameda, in order to keep the business operating. That is the textbook definition of insolvency. Pereira v. Farace, 413 F.3d 330, 343 (2d Cir. 2005) (under Delaware law, âa company is insolvent if it is unable to pay its debts as they fall due in the usual course of businessâ).
The defendant suggests in the alternative that the loss to FTX customers should be calculated based on their âcost of collection in bankruptcy.â (Def. Mem. at 22). That argument is flawed for the reasons already given, because it would only come into play if the defendant could claim credit for bankruptcy recoveries to reduce the loss amount, which he cannot. And the defendantâs citation to United States v. Abiodun, 536 F.3d 162 (2d Cir. 2008), provides no support for his position. In the section of Abiodun relied on by the defendant, the Second Circuit was considering how to quantify the ânumber of victims affected by defendantsâ conduct,â for purposes of the Guidelines enhancement for number of victims. Id. at 167-68. In that context, the court held that victims of an identity theft scheme who had been reimbursed by their credit card companies could still be counted as victims, if the district court included the monetary value of the time those victims spent seeking reimbursement in the total loss amount for the offense. Id. at 169. Thus, the holding of Abiodun is that the costs of collection should be added to the total loss amount, not that such costs are the only permissible loss amount. See id. at 169 (remanding for district court to ârecalculate the loss amount ⌠to include the time lost by these potential victimsâ).
4. Even Setting Aside FTX Customers, the Loss Amount to FTX Investors Is Greater Than $1.7 Billion
As discussed, the defendantâs arguments attempting to minimize FTX customer losses are legally and factually meritless. However, even if all of the defendantâs arguments about customer losses were credited, that would have no effect on his Guidelines range because the losses to FTX investors alone are far greater than the highest loss amount enhancement in the Guidelines. The defendant was convicted of securities fraud for his scheme to fraudulently obtain more than $1.7 billion in equity investments into FTX.com, and even the defendant acknowledges that equity investors are not expected to recover from the bankruptcy plan on which he relies for his arguments about customers. (Def. Mem. at 20). Instead, he simply tries to wave off the losses to investors by saying that they âreceived an equity stake, not a âcash-back guarantee.ââ (Def. Mem. at 20).
That is not the law. In a securities fraud case, the loss amount is calculated as the decline in value of the securities purchased by investors, insofar as that decline is a âresult of the fraud.â United States v. Rutkoske, 506 F.3d 170, 179 (2d Cir. 2007). In cases where the securities decline in value over time for multiple reasons in addition to a defendantâs fraud, the âportion of a price decline caused by other factors must be excluded from the loss calculation.â Id. at 179. In this case, however, the defendant raised funds from investors at a valuation of $32 billion for FTX.com in early 2022, and continued to seek fundraising at that valuation into the fall of 2022. Then, once his fraud was exposed, the company declared bankruptcy within a matter of days and the investors immediately wrote the value of their investments down to zero. This is therefore an example of a case âwhere share price drops so quickly and so extensively immediately upon disclosure of a fraud that the difference between pre- and post-disclosure share prices is a reasonable estimate of loss caused by the fraud.â Id. Accordingly, the full amount of the funds invested is the appropriate measure of loss.
5. In the Alternative, the Intended Loss Is Even Greater Than $10 Billion
U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1, defines âlossâ as âthe greater of actual loss or intended loss.â U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. n.3(A). The commentary further defines âintended lossâ as âthe pecuniary harm that the defendant purposely sought to inflict,â even if that loss did not occur or was impossible, id. cmt. n.3(A)(ii). Due to the more than $8 billion dollars of actual losses suffered by the countless victims of the defendantâs fraudulent scheme, there is minimal need to turn to âintended lossâ to assess âthe seriousness of the offense and the defendantâs relative culpability.â See U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1 cmt. (background); see id. App. C Supp., at 104-05 (Amend. 793) (noting âthe Commissionâs belief that intended loss is an important factorâ because it focuses âspecifically on the defendantâs culpabilityâ). If, however, intended loss was applied in lieu of actual loss, the result would be no different for Guideline purposes. The trial record makes clear that the defendant intended to cause more than $14 billion in combined losses to FTX customers, investors, and Alameda lenders.
As a threshold matter, the defendantâs attempt to have this Court disregard the Guidelines commentary regarding § 2B1.1âs definition of âlossâ based on the Supreme Courtâs reasoning in Kisor v. Wilkie, 588 U.S. ---, 139 S. Ct. 2400 (2019), should be rejected. (Def. Mem. at 16). The Second Circuit and district courts within this Circuit have, even after Kisor, consistently applied the commentary on âintended lossâ when calculating the Guidelines range. Specifically, the law is clear that, â[f]or the purposes of calculating the Guidelines range, loss is defined as âthe greater of actual loss or intended loss.ââ United States v. Powell, 831 F. Appâx 24, 25 (2d Cir. 2020) (quoting United States v. Certified Envtl. Servs., Inc., 753 F.3d 72, 103 (2d Cir. 2014)). This makes sense because âthe larger intended amount is a better measure for the defendantâs culpability.â United States v. Lacey, 699 F.3d 710, 720 (2d Cir. 2012). Other courts have also rejected attempts to rely on Kisor to disregard the Guidelines use of intended loss. See United States v. You, 74 F.4th 378, 396â98 (6th Cir. 2023) (findingâafter canvassing several dictionariesâthat the term âlossâ in § 2B1.1. âhas no one definition,â âcan mean different things in different contexts,â and deferring to the Sentencing Commissionâs interpretation)
The defendant relies on the Third Circuitâs decision in United States v. Banks, 55 F.4th 246 (3d Cir. 2022), to argue that âlossâ âunambiguouslyâ means âactual loss.â (Def. Mem. at 16). But Banks is neither binding on this Court, nor persuasive. As noted in You, âwithout consulting the âtraditional toolsâ of the commentaryâs âstructure, history, and purposeâ to reach that conclusion, Kisor, 139 S. Ct. at 2415, Banksâs attempt to impose a one-size-fits-all definition is not persuasive.â 74 F.4th at 397. Where the Guidelines note that the purpose of estimating âloss,â including intended loss, is designed to assess the âseriousness of the offense and the defendantâs relative culpability,â § 2B1.1 cmt. (background), the defendantâs interpretation would lead to vastly different sentences for similarly culpable defendants where one successfully stole money before causing actual losses, but the other did not. Moreover, the Guidelines commentary with respect to § 2B1.1 âlossâ is the very type of âfair and considered [agency] judgmentâ described in Kisor that has been applied by courts and litigants across the country for years to uniformly calculate loss where fraud schemes, thefts, and embezzlements often vary significantly. See Mistretta v. United States, 488 U.S. 361, 379 (1989) (rejecting a constitutional challenge to the Sentencing Commission and finding that â[d]eveloping proportionate penalties for hundreds of different crimes by a virtually limitless array of offenders is precisely the sort of intricate, laborintensive task for which delegation to an expert body is especially appropriateâ). For these reasons, the Sentencing Commissionâs § 2B1.1 âlossâ guidance is perfectly appropriate to consider when evaluating the defendantâs Guidelines range.
Turning to the facts established at trial, it is clear that the defendant intended to deprive FTX customers and investors, along with Alameda lenders, of even more than the $8 billion suffered in actual losses. See United States v. Jacobs, 117 F.3d 82, 95 (2d Cir. 1997) (â[T]he concept underlying the distinction between actual and intended loss is that the defendant may have the goal of depriving the victim or victims of more than the constraints of the situation âactuallyâ permit. The significance is that the defendantâs acts should be measured by intentions.â).
Here, witness testimony and internal spreadsheets established that between June and November 2022 the defendant knew Alameda owed FTX billions of dollars, up to around $14 billion by September 2022, which could not be legitimately repaid. With the assistance of Government Exhibit 50, a spreadsheet titled âAlameda Balances by FTX sub-info,â dated June 14, 2022, Wang testified that the defendant reviewed the spreadsheet and knew at that time that Alameda owed FTX $11 billion. (Tr. 436-437; GX-50). When excluding Alameda accounts, such as Cottongrove, which contained large amounts of illiquid FTT, Alamedaâs debt expanded to $16 billion. (Tr. 619-20). Yet, even after discussing this disastrous financial situation, Bankman-Fried ordered that Alamedaâs lenders be repaid with FTX customer money, which enabled the fraud to continue undetected. (Tr. 440, 620). Wang, Ellison, and Singh all testified that by September 2022, conversations circulated amongst the group, including the defendant, that Alameda could not be shut down because it owed FTXâand therefore, FTX customersâapproximately $14 billion. (Tr. 447-449, 817-20, 1403, GX-11). When confronted by Singh on the balcony of the Orchid 6 penthouse, the defendant admitted that âin 24 hours, if pressedâ FTX could only âdeliver around $5 billion,â which left a $8 billion shortfall. (Tr. 1407). Even after this confrontation with Singh, the defendant continued to take FTX customer money and put it into his own investments, which belies his claims that he intended no losses to customers. (Tr. 1417-18).
In his submission, the defendant relies on United States v. Confredo, 528 F.3d 143 (2d Cir. 2008), to support his assertion that the Court should credit that the intended loss is zero because he purportedly intended to repay his victims. (Def. Mem. at 23). But in Confredo, the Second Circuit was interpreting a special Guideline amendment to U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1, which applied only to fraudulent loan and contract procurement cases. Id. at 150-51. The courtâs reasoning, therefore, does not apply to this case. And even if Confredo applied here, it would mean only that the Court could consider whether there was evidence that the defendant had an intent to repay. Id. at 152-53 (remanding to allow defendant to present evidence of his intent). Such evidence would need to take the form of a concrete expectation that the losses would be lower than the potential losses implicated in the scheme, such as the anticipated loan repayments at issue in Confredo. Nothing in Confredo suggests that intended loss can be reduced based on the defendantâs general hope that things would âwork out,â or his expectation that he could reap personal profits from his investments and then return victim funds before his fraud was discovered. To reduce the intended loss amount on that vague basis would be inconsistent with the Second Circuitâs admonition that âwhere some immediate loss to the victim is contemplated by a defendant, the fact that the defendant believes (rightly or wrongly) that he will âultimatelyâ be able to work things out so that the victim suffers no loss is no excuse for the real and immediate loss contemplated to result from defendantâs fraudulent conduct.â United States v. Rossomando, 144 F.3d 197, 201 (2d Cir. 1998).
Here, the evidence undermines the defendantâs claim that he did not intend any loss. Aside from his own self-serving claims, he cites just two things. The first is a letter from an FTX employee who did not begin directly working with the defendant until around November 7, 2022, and who claims that the defendant was seeking to recover funds for customers after that point in time. (Def. Ex. A-9). But even if the defendant was working to recover funds for customers at that time, those efforts to repay victims took place after his fraud had been exposed, when he had an incentive to reduce his potential liability. It says nothing about his intent when he was engaged in the actual fraudulent conduct in the years prior. Moreover, there is no real evidence that the defendant actually undertook any efforts that facilitated customer recovery during this time. Notably, the Debtorsâ counsel in the bankruptcy has never suggested that the defendant provided any significant assistance. And one of the few concrete actions the defendant took during this time period was to file an affidavit attempting to claim personal ownership of the $650 million worth of stock that he had purchased with FTX customer funds, in an apparent effort to prevent the bankruptcy estate from recovering those assets. (Tr. 2710-11; GX-933).
The second item on which the defendant relies is a footnote in the March 2023 FTX Debtorsâ report, which states that there were a number of deposits into FTX from Alameda in the days immediately prior to the bankruptcy. (Def. Mem. at 23 (citing Def. Ex. G at 18 n.1)).[8] But those returns of funds at the very end could just as well be evidence of the defendantâs continuing fraudulent intent, in that the defendant was trying to cover customer withdrawals and reinforce his false public statements that FTX had sufficient funds on hand. Nothing cited by the defendant comes close to countering the overwhelming trial evidence that during the fraud scheme, he intended to deprive customers, investors, and lenders of billions of dollars for his personal benefit. The defendant misappropriated those funds to invest in a variety of speculative assets. Even if he hoped that those investments would prove profitable, enabling him to escape detection for his misuse of victim funds, that is not sufficient to reduce the intended loss calculation.
Based on the trial record, there is ample evidence to establish that at the height of FTXâs decline, Bankman-Fried intended to cause in excess of $14 billion of losses to FTX/Alameda victims, which he had no intention of ever legitimately repaying.
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[3] Arguably, the defendant should not benefit from this provision, because he returned these funds in an effort to conceal his fraud and prevent more customers from making withdrawal requests. To the extent the Court were to find that the defendantâs return of misappropriated funds between September and November 2022 was intended to keep his fraudulent schemes operating, the loss amount to customers would be properly calculated at $14 billion, rather than $8 billion. See, e.g., United States v. Vilar, 729 F.3d 62, 96 n.34 (2d Cir. 2013) (rejecting the argument that loss amount should be reduced by amount returned to investors because âdefendants should not benefit from attempting to ensure the continuation of their schemeâ); United States v. Carrozzella, 105 F.3d 796, 805 (2d Cir. 1997), abrogated in part on other grounds, United States v. Kennedy, 233 F.3d 157, 160-61 (2d Cir. 2000) (âWe have held that loss in fraud cases includes the amount of property taken, even if all or part has been returned.... One reason for this rule is that ⌠the return of money as interest or other income is often necessary for the scheme to continue.â); United States v. Mucciante, 21 F.3d 1228, 1237-38 (2d Cir. 1994) (âAlthough [defendant] returned some of [victim-1]âs money, and repaid [victim-2] and [victim-3], he did so as part of a meretricious effort to maintain their confidences. He is therefore not entitled to credit for sums returned, or for sums spent for [victim-1]âs benefit.â).
[4] Additionally, the defendant was convicted of money laundering, and the Section 2S1.1 Guideline groups with Section 2B1.1. There is no âcredit against lossâ in the money laundering context: under Section 2S1.1, defendants who launder money are accountable for the âoffense level for the underlying offense from which the laundered funds were derived.â U.S.S.G. § 2S1.1(a)(1); United States v. Eckstein, No. CR 12-3182 JB, 2016 WL 546663, at *7 (D.N.M. Feb. 3, 2016) (no âcredit against lossâ in money laundering case because that credit âwould not reflect a money laundering schemeâs full impact.â).
[5] Even if Durham did support the defendantâs position here, it is contrary to the Second Circuitâs decisions in Ware and Bergstein. And the district courtâs sentencing in Durham is hardly persuasive authority for this Court. As the district court in Durham itself said: âI donât know about what goes on in the Southern District of New York. I visit there only rarely. This is the Heartland. This is where we work hard. ⌠We drive Chevies and Buicks and Fords, not Bugattis.â Durham, 766 F.3d at 685.
[6] Though not necessary for the Courtâs analysis, the Government has every reason to believe that at least a significant causal factor in the drop in Bitcoinâs value in the weeks leading up to FTXâs collapse was market instability due to revelations about the defendantâs misconduct.
[7] Some FTX customers are receiving even lower value in bankruptcy. Holders of FTXâs token FTT are near the bottom of the priority listâsitting in thirteenth placeâand the Government understands that it is unlikely that holders of that token will receive compensation from the estate. See In re FTX Trading Ltd., et al., 22-11068 (JTD) (Bankr. D. Del. Jan. 31, 2024), Dkt. 4861 at 27-28.
[8] The defendantâs brief erroneously cites Ex. F rather than Ex. G.
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