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Sam Bankman-Fried sentencing LIVE: Tiffany Fong among dozens who spent night in rain lining up for SBF's sentencing

8 months ago 23

By Laura Parnaby For Dailymail.Com

Published: 13:13 GMT, 28 March 2024 | Updated: 15:54 GMT, 28 March 2024

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Sam Bankman-Fried has been sentenced to 25 years in jail

He was found guilty on seven charges of wire fraud and conspiracy in November 2023.

SBF's lawyer seeks to separate him from 'truly vile defendants' like Bernie Madoff

Attorney Marc Mukasey said prosecutors had pointed to ‘truly vile defendants’ like Bernie Madoff who ‘looked Holocaust survivors in the eye and took their money'.

‘These defendants are stone-cold financial assassins,' he began.

‘That level of depravity and cruelty was nowhere I saw in the testimony in this case.

'It’s nowhere in Sam’s history as a person because I don’t think it’s anywhere in Sam’s heart.

‘Sam was not a ruthless financial serial killer who set out every morning to hurt people. There was nothing predatory, rapacious or venal about his conduct.

‘Sam Bankman-Fried doesn’t make decisions with malice in his heart. He makes decisions with math in his head.'

Mukasey described SBF instead as an 'awkward math nerd' who loves 'video games and veganism'.

'I'm sorry': Bankman-Fried apologizes to victims in a rambling 20-minute speech to court

Bankman-Fried claimed that the collapse of FTX ‘haunts me every day’ in a rambling speech which veered between apologetic, self-pitying and defiant.

‘A lot of people feel really let down and they were very let down,' he told the court.

‘I’m sorry about that. I’m sorry about what happened at every stage. Things I should have done, things I shouldn’t have’.

But he also claimed his decisions weren't 'selfish' but 'bad', while continuing to insist that FTX customers could be paid back in full, even though that isn’t the case.

Sam Bankman-Fried IGNORES his parents in court

Bankman-Fried ignored his parents as he faked being in handcuffs with his hands behind his back as he entered the courtroom to learn his prison fate.

The 32-year-old FTX founder is appearing in person at the New York City federal court to be sentenced. His hair had grown out from the short trim he got during the trial, however he was clean shaven.

He entered through a side door with his hands behind his back, though he wasn't actually cuffed. Bankman-Fried at a table looking at papers, not acknowledging his parents  in the gallery.

FTX's former CEO and founder Sam Bankman-Fried's mother, Barbara Fried (L), and his father, Joseph Bankman, arrive at Manhattan Federal Court for his sentencing at Manhattan Federal Court in New York City on March 28, 2024. (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP) (Photo by TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images)

The first victim of SBF's colossal fraud has spoken in court - describing 'living the FTX nightmare every day for almost two years'

Sunil Kavuri, a British victim of the FTX fraud, said he had flown in from London to speak on behalf of the 200 victims who had given victim impact statements to the court.

Kavuri said he's been 'living the FTX nightmare every day for almost two years, a lot of crying, sleepless nights’.

‘I have a new baby son and older and have spoken to tens of thousand of victims like myself who have had their dreams destroyed,' he said.

‘My house, the money I wanted to spend on a family home was taken away as well as my children's education’.

Kavuri said that he disputed the idea that FTX customers would get all their money back. Judge Kaplan agreed and said that would be ‘incorrect’.

‘All the creditors continue to suffer, not only monetary loss, but emotional and mental distress,' Kavuri said.

‘People are on medication, recovering, mental health issues, depression and sadly at least three people I’ve heard of have committed suicide as a result of this FTX fraud.’

Bankman-Fried avoided looking at Kavuri as he spoke.

Judge Kaplan has made three perjury findings against SBF in a blow to his defense in the sentencing hearing

Judge Kaplan has made three findings of 'wilful' perjury against Sam Bankman-Fried.

He also ruled that SBF's texts to the former counsel of FTX constituted 'attempted witness tampering'

'He committed perjury in relation to the claim that until the Fall of 2022 he had no knowledge Alameda had spent FTX customer deposits,' Judge Kaplan said.

‘He testified falsely that he first learned Alamada had a roughly $8bn liability to FTX in October 2022,' the judge told the court.

‘He falsely testified that he did not know repayment of third party loans to Alameda in June 20202 would require Alameda to borrow more customer funds’.

Tiffany Fong among dozens who spent night in the rain lining up for SBF's sentencing

Crypto influencer Fong, who is one of the most high-profile victims of SBF's colossal FTX fraud, is among those who camped out on the street outside the Manhattan courthouse to secure a front-row seat in his sentencing hearing.

Fong posted a video of herself nine hours before the courthouse was set to open.

'I collected some trash from the streets and I'm going to try to make a makeshift bed out of this street trash.

'I'm going to try to take a nap outside of the courthouse, and goodnight to me.'

Her video was greeted with a 'fire' emoji from Twitter tsar Elon Musk.

Which jail could Bankman-Fried end up in?

Christopher Zoukis, an federal prisons expert, told DailyMail.com he believes Bankman-Fried will likely be sent to a West Coast jail, like FCI Herlong or Mendota.

Zoukis serves as the managing director of the Zoukis Consulting Group, a firm that, among other things, prepares soon-to-be federal inmates by educating them about life in federal prison.

The consultancy has clients in minimum security prisons, all the way up to ADX Florence in Colorado, a supermax facility housing some of the nation's most notorious criminals.

Zoukis explained that the Federal Bureau of Prisons applies a security point value to prisoners that in part determines which kind of prison they'll be housed in.

The sentence length also greatly informs where a convict will end up.

Bankman-Fried's defense filed a last-minute plea for mercy

Lawyers representing the former crypto kingpin aired letters that urged leniency, with statements from his friends telling the story of a neurodivergent, vegan man who cares for animals.

His lawyers are pushing for a six-year jail term, saying a 100-year sentence would be 'grotesque' and 'barbaric'.

Prosecutors are seeking a prison sentence of 40 to 50 years

In mid-March, federal prosecutors called for a prison sentence of several decades.

'The sheer scale of Bankman-Fried's fraud calls for severe punishment,' the attorneys wrote.

'The amount of loss - at least $10 billion - makes this one of the largest financial frauds of all time,' they added.

'His life in recent years has been one of unmatched greed and hubris; of ambition and rationalization; and courting risk and gambling repeatedly with other people's money'.

If he is given a light sentence, prosecutors said, there is a risk that he would continue to carry out fraud.

Sam Bankman-Fried is set to be sentenced in Manhattan court today, marking the finale of America's biggest fraud case

The 32-year-old could face up to 110 years behind bars under the maximum term for stealing $8 billion from customers of the now-bankrupt FTX exchange he founded.

The hearing will mark the culmination of Bankman-Fried's downfall from an ultra-wealthy cryptocurrency entrepreneur and major political donor to U.S. authorities' biggest trophy to date in a crackdown on malfeasance in digital asset markets.

His hearing is set to start at 9.30am EDT before US DIstrict Judge Lewis Kaplan in New York City.

Follow the DailyMail.com live blog for updates on the hearing as it happens.

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