ALSO: Stanford returning millions to FTX; anon cannot appeal Craig Wright win; and more |

Sept. 20, 2023

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Welcome to The Node! This is Daniel Kuhn here to take you through the latest in crypto news and why it matters.

 

In today's news: SEC is preparing to file more lawsuits against exchange and DeFi. Sam Bankman-Fried's parents "gifts" to Stanford will be returned to FTX. And an anonymous operator of Bitcoin.com cannot appeal Craig Wright's court victory without revealing their identity.

 

The takeaway: Sam Bankman-Fried's parents were sued by FTX for misappropriating millions. Ben Schiller says the lawyers ought to have known better.

 

Coming for Crypto

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is preparing to file even more lawsuits against crypto exchanges and DeFi projects, according to the agency's Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit head David Hirsch. “We’re going to continue to bring those charges,” said Hirsch, drawing a comparison to businesses violating securities laws in similar ways to Coinbase and Binance. The only thing truly holding the agency back is bandwidth and budget, he said, adding the agency cannot conceivably go after every token project that exists.

 

Roundtrip Gift

Stanford University will be returning Sam Bankman-Fried's parents "gifts" worth millions of dollars to FTX. On Monday, FTX Group sued Bankman and Fried for misappropriating millions of dollars worth of dollars and assets, including $5.5 million in donations to the prestigious university allegedly earmarked for pandemic research. “We have been in discussions with attorneys for the FTX debtors to recover these gifts and we will be returning the funds in their entirety,” a Stanford University spokesperson said. Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried are on leave as professors at Stanford Law School. 

 

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Anon-or-Bust

A London High Court Judge on Monday said Bitcoin.org website operators, including someone who goes by Cøbra, cannot fight the self-proclaimed Bitcoin inventor Craig Wright in court while staying pseudonymous. Wright successfully sued Cøbra in April 2021 over copyright infringement for publishing Bitcoin's whitepaper, which Wright claims to have written, after Cøbra was a no-show in court. Bitcoin.com was ordered to take down the white paper. Cøbra's attempt to appeal the decision and legal fees of 568,516.42 pounds ($704,500) was rejected in November after Cøbra refused to identify themselves by their government name.

 

The Takeaway: Adults in the Room

(CoinDesk)

For months, Sam Bankman-Fried’s parents, Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, have stood at their son’s side as he faced multiple federal charges of fraud, money laundering and campaign finance violations related to the collapse of FTX. 

 

Now, the Stanford professors find themselves squarely at the center of the case, accused of misappropriating millions in company assets and playing a key role in alleged misdoings at the fallen cryptocurrency empire. 

 

The SBF trial is becoming a family affair. 

 

“Bankman and Fried exploited their access and influence within the FTX enterprise to enrich themselves, directly and indirectly,” the company’s complaint, filed Monday, begins, listing multiple ways in which Joseph and Barbara quietly directed operations behind the scenes.

 

SBF has said his parents “weren’t involved in any of the relevant parts” of the business, but prosecutors say “they were very much involved — from the founding of the FTX Group until its collapse.”

 

Bankman portrayed himself “as the proverbial adult in the room” as he worked “alongside inexperienced fellow executive officers, directors and managers responsible for safeguarding billions of dollars,” the complaint says.

He “received millions of dollars in unearned ‘gifts’ and real property, flew on privately-chartered jets, expensed $1,200 per night hotel stays to the FTX Group, and even appeared in a Super Bowl commercial with Seinfeld writer Larry David months before the FTX Group imploded,” prosecutors say.

Fried, meanwhile, was the “single most influential advisor” to SBF/FTX’s political contributions campaign, repeatedly calling upon her son to give millions of dollars directly to a political action committee that she co-founded and for which she served as President and Chairwoman. 

 

You have to hand it to the SBF’s prosecutors. They know how to frame an anecdote and raise a telling detail. 

 

In January, 2022, Bankman was unhappy with his $200,000 annual FTX salary. He emailed FTX’s U.S. head of administration, saying he was only receiving gross pay of $16,667 per month, when he was “supposed to be getting $1M/yr, starting in December.” 

 

He then emailed his son: “Gee, Sam I don’t know what to say here. This is the first [I] have heard of the 200K a year salary! Putting Barbara on this.”

SBF was caught between his parents, double-teamed. 

 

Bankman was said to be an adult, but he was not above lobbying for access to FTX’s star network. He just had to be involved in FTX’s 2022 Super Bowl commercial if Larry David was onboard. 

 

“OK, I’m not a star- fucker and don’t really care about meeting, say, Tom Brady. But Larry David....,” he emailed his son, prosecutors say. 

 

The parents’ lawyers described the filing Monday as a “dangerous attempt to intimidate Joe and Barbara and undermine the jury process just days before their child's trial begins. These claims are completely false.”

But we can expect prosecutors to continue to widen their scope to the whole Bahamas-based cabal running FTX, turning insiders into informers and associates into accomplices in their legal efforts.

It all adds to our expectation for the trial due to begin in October (which CoinDesk will be covering extensively) and adds to the notion that “it takes a village” to create a clown-show as wide-ranging as FTX.

SBF did not bring down a $40 billion empire on his own. He needed help, including from his parents, who, being the adults in the room, really should have known better even if their son did not.  

 

– Ben Schiller, Managing Editor

 

A message from Phemex

Future ‘Shock’? Phemex Probably Won’t Be Even Mildly Surprised

 

Phemex, a centralized exchange making moves to partially decentralize, is celebrating Bitcoin’s 15th anniversary by placing a big bet: If the bellwether token is worth $50,000 or more on October 31st, the exchange will pay out 1,000 BTC to Phemex Soul Pass holders. To do the easy math, that’s $50 million. Sure, it’s unlikely that BTC’s dollar-denominated value will double in the short term – but would you bet that much that it won’t?

 

In the more likely scenario that BTC stays in its current $25,000 to $30,000 trading range – where it has been, given a little leeway, since March – Phemex is still giving away 1 BTC. Continue Reading

 
 

Off-Chain Signals 

  • Mom and Dad in the Crosshairs  Will SBF Be Mad? – Unchained
  • Ethereum All Core Developers Execution Call #170 Writeup – Galaxy
  • Scammers pose as bankruptcy firm to drain Celsius users’ wallets – Protos
  • Arbitrum agrees to give away $42m grant amid push to keep layer 2 competitors at bay – DL News
  • LayerZero swaps Chainlink for Google Cloud: A move away from decentralization? – Blockworks
 

In the Eyes of the NFT Holder

 
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