Ex-FTX Exec’s Plea Deal Still at the Center of Court Case

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Almost three years after the collapse of crypto trade FTX, courtroom battles tied to its executives and their associates are nonetheless unfolding. This week, Michelle Bond, partner of former FTX Digital Markets co-CEO Ryan Salame, will return to courtroom for an evidentiary listening to in her felony case.

In a Sunday filing within the US District Courtroom for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), Bond’s authorized crew requested {that a} federal choose permit her to testify regardless of prosecutors’ objections.

Prosecutors had argued Friday that it was unlikely Bond might supply testimony related to Salame’s plea settlement involving allegations of marketing campaign finance fraud. He’s at present serving time in jail for costs associated to his function within the firm’s downfall.

Salame’s plea deal sits on the coronary heart of Bond’s case over alleged marketing campaign finance violations. Prosecutors alleged that Salame ordered $400,000 in funds tied to FTX despatched to her marketing campaign.

Bond was charged with conspiracy to trigger illegal marketing campaign contributions, inflicting and accepting extreme marketing campaign contributions, inflicting and receiving an illegal company contribution, and inflicting and receiving a conduit contribution in August 2024. She pleaded not responsible to all costs.

“The federal government has no grounds to pre-emptively bar Ms. Bond from testifying as a result of her testimony is neither redundant nor irrelevant,” mentioned her attorneys. “Ms. Bond’s and her husband’s mind-set in getting into into the plea settlement are immediately related to the problems earlier than the Courtroom […]”

Law, Cryptocurrency Exchange, Court, Crimes, FTX
Sunday submitting by Michelle Bond’s legal professionals. Supply: Courtlistener

As one among 5 defendants included within the indictment of former FTX and Alameda Analysis executives, Salame pleaded responsible to conspiracy to make illegal political contributions and defraud the Federal Election Fee and conspiracy to function an unlicensed cash transmitting enterprise.

He was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in jail, where he reported in October 2024. 

After Salame’s responsible plea, his legal professionals tried to vacate his take care of US prosecutors, claiming that the settlement was contingent on them not pursuing felony costs in opposition to Bond. He finally dropped the grievance, saying that Bond would tackle the matter as a part of her case.

Associated: Judge questions if ex-FTX exec perjured himself in guilty plea