SBF (Somehow) Had Another Bad Day in Court

SBF (Somehow) Had Another Bad Day in Court

SBF (Somehow) Had Another Bad Day in Court

This week saw the Second Circuit Court of Appeals hear arguments in Sam Bankman-Fried’s appeal of his criminal conviction. The three-judge panel appeared very skeptical of his attorney’s arguments.

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FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried’s appeal was always going to be an uphill journey. Senior Judge Lewis Kaplan, the Southern District of New York jurist who oversaw the trial, is generally well-respected and the bar for securing a new trial is high.

Short of a presidential pardon (which still seems unlikely), this hearing may have been Bankman-Fried’s last chance at securing an early release from prison. While he’s been posting on the site formerly known as Twitter through a friend, the legal case has wound its way through the appeals process to the November 4 hearing.

Circuit Judges Eunice Lee, Maria Araújo Kahn and Barrington Parker all appeared skeptical of appellate attorney Alexandra Shapiro’s arguments that Bankman-Fried did not receive a fair trial.

To quickly recap: the appeal centered around the request that the former FTX CEO receive a new trial with a new judge because, in Bankman-Fried and team’s view, Judge Kaplan was biased against him. Bankman-Fried was not allowed to argue that he was listening to lawyers or that FTX’s creditors were going to be made whole, the appeals filing said.

“The defense was cut off at the knees by [Judge Kaplan’s] rulings,” Shapiro said halfway through the hearing.

The judges did not appear to buy these arguments. Judge Kahn asked about whether FTX’s issues were not liquidity, rather than solvency, as well as that a recent Supreme Court precedent held that just taking the funds was sufficient to convict on fraud charges.

“How do you square that with, for example, the recent Supreme Court decision, and other decisions cited in the recent Supreme Court decision that the fact that victims might be whole or weren’t intended to be defrauded, is not a proper defense?” she asked.

Martin Auerbach, of counsel at Withers, told CoinDesk last week that if the panel asked certain questions around that dry run, it could hint that the judges were legitimately concerned about that proceeding.

“If you hear those kinds of questions, then it might lead you to conclude that the court has some concern about the complete impartiality that every defendant is entitled to,” he said.

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