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FTX crypto boss, Sam Bankman-Fried to be released on $250million bail after returning to US from Bahamas over alleged $1.8 billion fraud

FTX crypto boss, Sam Bankman-Fried will be released on a $ 250 million bond after a deal was struck today in a New York City courtroom. 

He was arrested in the Bahamas last week on a range of fraud and money laundering charges for what prosecutors described as one of the biggest financial crimes in American history. 

It was alleged that he used his crypto-trading platform as a ‘personal piggy bank’, convincing investors to mark their billions with him only to funnel their assets into his own company. His alleged scheme was revealed when FTX filed for bankruptcy in November. 

Today, a judge agreed to grant him bail – the ‘largest pre-trial amount in US history’. 

The agreement is a recognizance bond signed by Bankman-Fried’s parents and two other individuals with ‘considerable’ assets. His parents guaranteed it using the equity of their home, but they do not have to pay the full amount to secure his freedom. 

Instead, they will be held liable if he fails to show up to court. SBF appeared in court shackled, wearing a dark suit and tie. He spoke only to confirm that he understood the charges and the bail agreement.  

His parents, Stanford Law professors Barbara and Alan Bankman-Fried, have agreed to put up the equity they own in their $4million California home, where he will live during his house arrest, as part of the bail requirement. 

Two other people – one relative and one non-relative – will fulfil the rest of the bond. It remains unclear if he is required to pay the full $250million or a portion of it.  

Bankman-Fried, 30, has been charged with a range of fraud and money laundering charges after allegedly stealing $1.8billion from his crypto-trading platform, FTX, to fund his own life. 

Federal prosecutors and investigators from the SEC say he used the platform like a ‘personal piggy bank’ to fund his own lifestyle.  

Prosecutors told the court that SBF committed fraud of ‘epic proportions’.  The judge agreed with the prosecution that the ‘weight of the evidence was strong’. 

One of the reasons he was confident in granting bond was SBF’s newfound fame – he has ‘achieved sufficient notoriety that it would be impossible’ for him to hide, he said. 

Another term of his bail agreement is wearing an electronic ankle monitor. He is banned from opening any new lines of new credit, he must remain within the Northern District of California and must undergo mental health counseling after complaining of depression in previous proceedings. 

He will return to court on January 3rd.  

His parents, Barbara and Alan, accompanied him to court today and in the Bahamas. Barbara is said to have laughed every time the judge referred to her son as a fugitive. 

According to a recent report by The Washington Free Beacon, the couple not only own their $4million home in Stanford, but also a vacation property in The Bahamas

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