Molly White's Citation Needed - The FTX trial, day twelve: What's up with Sam Bankman-Fried's defense?
Episode Date: November 30, 2023Is the defense team doing as poorly as it looks, or do they have a trick up their sleeves? Originally published on October 19, 2023....
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The FTX trial day 12. What's up with Sam Bankman-Fried's defense?
Is the defense team doing as poorly as it looks, or do they have a trick up their sleeves?
This issue was originally published on October 19, 2023.
If the defense is going to make a case that Sam Bankman-Fraid was acting on advice of counsel,
as they've alluded to in the past, although perhaps not seriously pursued,
it's certainly not going to be built off the back of Cann's son's testimony.
The former FTX attorney testified Thursday that he, like so many others, had been bamboozled
by Sam-Bankman-Fraid about the misappropriation of FTX customer funds.
He had repeatedly talked about the care FTCS took in the same thing.
safeguarding customer funds, something he said he genuinely believed to be true based on the conversations
he'd had with Sam Bankman-Fried. He claimed he only learned about the billions of missing funds on
November 7 as the company hurtled towards bankruptcy. He resigned the following day.
Sun also spoke about how Bankman Fried invited him on a walk shortly before a call with possible
rescue investors, where Bankman Fried asked him to come up with possible theoretical explanations for
how FtX could have lost so much customer money that would still be within the bounds of the law.
Sun suggested a few, though he said he didn't think any of them were supported by the facts.
He would later hear Bankman Fried regurgitate one of those theories, which related to customer-approved
borrowing and lending on Good Morning America.
If Alameda is borrowing the money that belongs to FTX depositors, that's a bright red line, isn't it?
There are a lot of cases where that's actually explicitly part of the programs that are happening.
But not here.
Here it says that the digital assets may not be loaned to FTX trading.
They can't be loaned out.
There existed a borrow lending facility on FTCS.
And I think that's probably covered, I don't remember exactly where, but somewhere else in the terms of service.
But they'd have to approve of that. They're saying they didn't approve of it here.
They're saying you approved of it.
If you rewind to the beginning of FTX, where, you know, some customers were, you know, I think, in line with sort of existing relationships that they've had, at least in some cases,
wiring money straight to Alameda research in order to trade on FTX.
So you do know and you did know that FDX deposits were being funneled to Alameda.
So I was vaguely aware that that was how some virus were being sent in the first place.
The defense's past claims that Bankman Freed's company-wide message deletion policy was blessed by its lawyers also earned no support from Sun,
who said he couldn't recall any data retention documentation at all.
Today's witnesses, son and an investor named Bob Borajardi, were brief and offered no real bombshells,
so instead I will be turning to a question I can't get out of my head.
What the hell is going on with Sandbank-Mfried's defense?
The defense's cross-examination on Thursday was similarly haphazard as in past days.
To be fair, we're still in the phase of the trial where the prosecution is putting on their case,
and so they have the home court advantage.
They're the ones choosing the witnesses,
many of whom they've met with dozens of times
over the months since the FTX collapse.
They set the order of testimony
and they lead the questioning,
so it's easier for them to formulate a strong narrative
as they incorporate both personal testimony
as to what happened
and corroborating documentary evidence.
They've done a good job.
Their story that Sam Bankman-Fried
knowingly spearheaded a massive fraud
with the help of his several co-conspirators, has been quite convincing.
They've even added color around the margins,
painting him as an incompetent boss, a bully,
and even an abusive boyfriend whose lopsided romance with Carolyn Ellison
allowed him to manipulate her into playing a major role in the fraud.
The defense's opportunities during cross-examination
to introduce doubt into the prosecution story
or the credibility of their witnesses,
or suggest alternate explanations for what really happened have seemed few and far between.
What opportunities do exist often seem to be squandered,
as one of the defense team's eight attorneys, typically Mark Cohen or Christian Everdell,
will regularly pick up a line of questioning only to seem to drop it
right as they begin to approach some possible conclusion.
One major argument they teased in their opening statement
that Ellison was responsible for the company's downfall, not Bankman-Fried,
sputtered out when it came time for them to cross-examine her,
and they landed no major blows to her credibility.
Repetitive questions have only echoed the direct questioning by the prosecution,
adding little new information for juries to incorporate
and giving the impression that the defense team is just running out the clock.
This behavior, more often than not, has led to stern rebukes by the judge,
both within and out-of-earshot of the jury,
who are likely looking to the judge
for a sort of vibe check on how each team is doing.
I keep waiting for another shoe to drop,
for the defense to pursue a line of argument
that makes everything suddenly crystallize,
weaving together the scattered threads of questioning
they've left strewn on the courtroom floor.
Maybe it will come next week,
as the defense team brings their case,
if they choose to do so.
The burden of proof rests with the prosecutors, and there is no obligation for the defense team
to prove the innocence of the defendant, so they could choose not to mount a case.
That seems pretty unlikely here, though, and would be tantamount to admitting defeat in the face
of such a strong case by the government.
But assuming they do bring a case, what will it even be?
They've hinted numerous possible arguments, that the blame rests solely with Bankman-Fried's co-conspirators,
or this was all one big mistake,
or the company was building the plane in mid-air,
or his lawyers told him it was okay,
or F-T-X was operating outside of the U.S.,
and so all those pesky laws don't apply,
or his company's terms of service allowed him to do whatever he wanted
with customer money.
The list goes on and on.
But none of those arguments has emerged as a front-runner,
and all seem to have been foreseen
and preemptively rebutted by the prosecution.
Perhaps they're hoping that this scattershot approach will still be enough to sow sufficient doubt
to convince at least one of 12 jurors that the government has not made its case beyond a reasonable doubt.
But why does the defense seem to be so weak?
As I rack my brain to understand why the defense is playing out this way, a few possibilities come to mind.
One possibility is that the defense team just isn't very good.
The team, which comes from the relatively distinguished Cohen and Gressler law firm, has a pretty good reputation, but could it be unearned?
After all, they didn't achieve an acquittal in their most well-known case either.
Gielane Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years.
Then again, they faced a near-impossible task defending a client with such provably close ties to Jeffrey Epstein,
and perhaps getting her a 20-year sentence out of a possible 35 years was the best potential.
outcome. Another possibility, significantly more likely than the first, in my view, is that this
case is similarly unwinnable. The defense's difficulty in conjuring a plausible, alternative explanation
for how these companies collapsed in which Bankman-Fried emerges innocent could simply be because
no such explanation exists. Defense attorneys aren't miracle workers, and try as they might, they can't
always prevent smoking guns from being introduced into evidence, such as Ellison's contemporaneous
admissions implicating Bankman-Freed at a surreptitiously recorded company meeting.
One additional factor that may be complicating things is the specific defendant they're tasked with
trying to exonerate. Bankman-Freed's past relationships with his lawyers have been troubled,
to say the least, with one team throwing in the towel less than two weeks after the company filed
for bankruptcy because of Bankman Fried's, quote, incessant and disruptive tweeting.
In an interview with Tiffany Fong, who asked what his then lawyers thought about his public statements,
he responded,
I felt him to go fuck themselves.
I don't think they know what they're talking about in an extremely narrow domain of litigation.
They don't understand the broader context of the world.
As someone who's watched Bankman Fried rather intently over the last year or so,
he's always come across to me as someone who is so confident in his own intelligence and abilities
that he believes he can outwit anyone. This could potentially include his own lawyers. If his defense
team doesn't have the full story from him, or if he's not being helpful in providing information
to formulate his defense, he could be sabotaging his very own strategy. Some obstinence on his part
seemed to come through in August, when, despite pleas from his defense team to the judge for more
access to their client, Bankman Fried refused to meet with his own lawyers because the jailhouse
internet was slow and the provided laptop battery was weak.
Will Bankmanfried testify?
It seems to me that Bankman Fried's best chance at this point is to keep his mouth shut and hope
that the jury, or at least one single juror, hasn't found the government's case to be convincing.
Putting the sometimes abrasive Bankman-Fried on the witness stand seems like a surefire way to turn the jury against him,
and he would face tough questions from the prosecution for which he may not be prepared.
His usual approaches of trying to dodge questions he doesn't want to answer or dance around them in long-winded but insubstantial responses
aren't likely to hold up well in front of experienced cross-examination under oath,
with a prosecution team equipped with an arsenal of evidence to rebut any falsehoods.
Even if he seems destined for conviction one way or another,
he still has much left to lose if he takes the stand.
He could still convince the jury to convict him on more charges than they otherwise might have,
or cause the judge to impose a longer sentence,
or cut off possible avenues for appeal.
Your average person would probably take the judge.
defense counsel's advice and clam up. Sam Bankman-Fried is not your average person.
The man who seems endlessly confident in his own abilities to talk his way out of trouble,
who has spoken of his willingness to take huge risks in the hopes of even a small chance
at an outsized reward, is exactly the type of person who might avail himself of the judge's offer.
If he wants to testify, even if his lawyers have advised him not to, all he has to do is
stand up. Thursday was the last day of court this week, and the trial won't resume until next
Thursday, the 26th. Although the prosecution has suggested a long list of witnesses they might call
in previous days and weeks, it seems they've only got three witnesses left in the running to appear
during the single day remaining in their case next week, an FBI agent, an investor, and a customer.
This means that Romnik Aurora and Delaney or Nois, two FTX employees who were listed as possible witnesses, are no longer slated to testify in the government's case.
Current estimates put the case a bit ahead of schedule, with the defense predicted to wrap up on November 3rd.
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