Molly White's Citation Needed - Sam Bankman-Fried will testify, and I'll be there
Episode Date: November 30, 2023I'm taking this show on the road to hear Sam Bankman-Fried testify in person. Originally published on October 26, 2023....
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I'm Molly White, and you're listening to the audio feed of the citation needed newsletter.
You can see the text version of the newsletter online at newsletter.mollywhite.net.
Sam Bankmanfried will testify, and I'll be there.
I'm taking this show on the road to hear Sam Bankman Fried testify in person.
This issue was originally published on October 26, 2023.
eavesdropping on a telephone conference between the judge and the legal teams this morning,
I received confirmation of what I've been increasingly suspecting as this trial has progressed.
Sam Bankman Fried will testify.
He's likely to take the stand beginning tomorrow.
Within an hour of hearing the news, I'd booked a flight and threw my notebook and laptop in a bag.
I'm currently writing this from several thousand feet in the air,
en route to New York City so I can join the throng of reporters,
cryptoskeptics and enthusiasts, and other curious onlookers
who will line up at the Manhattan Courthouse tomorrow morning.
For those listening to the audio version of this,
no, I'm not recording this on the airplane.
I am recording it in a hotel room,
so I apologize for any unusual background noise.
I've enjoyed writing about this trial remotely,
in part because I'm not forced offline for much of the day,
and so can pull in a lot of context and research that might be challenging if I was on site.
But reading court transcripts, pouring over prosecutors' exhibits,
and eventually hearing second-hand accounts from journalists in the courtroom,
simply won't suffice when it's Sam McMahon-Fried himself on the stand.
I have got to be there.
Why is testifying such a big deal?
Whether a defendant should take the stand in a criminal case is a major decision for any defendant,
team. A likable, genuine-sounding, and well-controlled defendant can help to win over a jury
with their testimony, making jurors more sympathetic to the defense's version of events after hearing
it in the defendant's own words. And while jurors are reminded that it's not up to the defendant
to prove their own innocence, not taking the stand sometimes leaves the impression that the
defendant has something to hide. Conversely, defendant testimony can tank a case. Not only
Only does the defendant answer questions posed by their own friendly legal team, taking the stand also means being cross-examined by the prosecution.
And the prosecutors in this case have seemed extremely capable.
Those prosecutors can take advantage of having the defendant on the stand to ask questions they otherwise might not be able to,
and further impeach the defendant's credibility by catching them in a lie or drawing attention to pass statements that conflict with what they say under oath.
Bankmanfried got a little squirmy, even in front of regular interviewers following the FTX collapse.
He doesn't seem likely to hold up well in front of experienced cross-examiners.
Bankman Fried is not the type of likable, genuine-sounding, well-controlled defendant who is apt to win over a jury.
Though he undoubtedly managed to charm many people in the past, that was under vastly different circumstances.
He was a paper billionaire sometimes described as the next J.P. Morgan. His apparently carefully crafted
reputation portrayed him as a young, nerdy, kind of weird innovator who was going to be the good guy
in the often seedy crypto world. And his face plastered covers of magazines that ran stories about
how he was planning to use all the wealth he was amassing to end suffering and make the world a better
place. But jurors are not meeting Bankman Freed on his luxurious Bahamian home turf where he reigns over
devoted employees. They're not watching him answer softball questions by adoring interviewers on stage at
glitzy crypto conferences. Instead, they've just spent three weeks hearing that he was a calculating,
manipulative boss, friend, and boyfriend whose beliefs about risk and theft ruined the lives of
countless victims. They've even heard how his once unruly hair and rumpled appearance were carefully
engineered to build the mythology of the nerdy genius who was too busy changing the world to brush his
hair. And now that that no longer serves him, they've discovered he's perfectly capable of getting a
haircut and putting on a suit. And for all those people who Bankman Fried successfully won over,
there are also many who found his demeanor, even before he was suspected of any wrongdoing, to be
arrogant and uncaring. And there's a reason lawyers were trying desperately to get him to stop
giving interviews following the FTX collapse. If anything he said then was untruthful, he can be
confronted with those statements on the stand and forced to make a choice. Lie under oath now,
or admit he was lying then. Most defendants have some corpus of statements upon which
prosecutors can draw. Few have the volume Bankman Fried has produced, and which he has helped
fully packaged and delivered to prosecutors with a little bow via interviews on national TV or written
statements to Congress.
Why is Bankmanfried testifying?
It seems very unlikely that Bankmanfried is testifying, per the advice of his legal team.
Observers have been fairly unanimous in speculating that Bankmanfried's lawyers have been doing
everything they possibly can to keep him from testifying, because it seems like there's
almost only downside. It's not like Bankman Fried is going to take the stand and suddenly
conjure up a convincing explanation for how everything went wrong that doesn't involve multiple
crimes on his part. If there was such a convincing story to be told, we would have heard it by now.
Instead, the defense has been taking a scattershot approach, picking around the edges but introducing
little doubt in the rather convincing explanation from prosecutors, that everything fell apart
because of Bankmanfried's massive, intentional fraud.
A defense team can tell Bankmanfried that testifying is a terrible idea.
They can try to reason with him or frighten him by regaling him with all the possible consequences of doing so.
But ultimately, they can't stop him from testifying.
He has a right to testify, whether they want him to or not.
Part of me wondered if he would promise his legal team that he wouldn't testify,
only to impulsively decide to take the stand at the last moment.
He seems to have at least extended them the courtesy of giving them advance notice,
letting them prepare their side of questioning,
and hopefully coach him a little bit for what might come his way during cross-examination.
But ultimately, it seems like the decision to testify probably came from Bankman Fried.
Will it work?
Bankman Fried may well believe that he's got such a convincing,
story that he'll have the jury delivering a not-guilty verdict by the end of his testimony.
If there was one takeaway from his media tour, it was that he seemed to believe that if he just
had the chance to explain himself, everyone would understand that he's a good guy who certainly
committed no crimes. I can sort of see where he came to this confidence. After all, there was a time
when he talked venture capitalists and others into giving him hundreds of millions of dollars.
However, given the prosecution's case so far, and the complete lack of a case from the defense, this seems mind-bogglingly unlikely.
His best hope at this point, I think, is to introduce just enough doubt with one single juror to hang the jury, preventing them from coming to a verdict at all.
Though this may be his best-case scenario, it's still not a good scenario.
A hung jury doesn't necessarily mean the prosecution goes, oh well, unlocks.
the handcuffs and escorts Bankman Freed out the doors onto the streets of Manhattan to wreak further havoc.
There are certainly instances in which prosecutors choose not to retry cases, but with such a high-profile
defendant and apparently strong case, I doubt this is one of them. At best, Bankman Fried might find
himself sitting in MDC Brooklyn for another couple of months before going through the whole thing again.
There would be some advantages. He'd be going into a new case with knowledge of the
prosecution strategy, he might be able to get better lawyers and prepare a new defense, or he could
potentially finally opt to take a plea deal. A perhaps more likely scenario, however, is that
testifying doesn't go well for him. He could solidify his guilt in the minds of the jurors or
influence Judge Kaplan's eventual sentencing determination. If he's caught lying under oath,
he could even end up with additional charges. But for a man willing to be able to be able to be able to
to take huge risks for even a slight chance at a reward, testifying was the obvious choice.
A quick programming note. I'm paying my own way for this trip to New York, so if you've been
considering signing up for a pay-what-you-want subscription or perhaps giving one to a friend as a gift,
now would be a great time to pull the trigger. And I owe a huge thank you to all of you who
already subscribe for even making this trip possible. I can't wait to keep you updated from Manhattan
on what's going on in this trial.
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