Crypto collapse: Sam Bankman-Fried goes to jail, SEC appeals Ripple ruling, Prime Trust bankrupt, the tangled tale of TrueUSD and Tron

  • By Amy Castor and David Gerard
  • Enjoying our posts? Keep them coming — send us money! Here’s Amy’s Patreon and here’s David’s
  • Another way you can help: tell just one other person about our work. Word of mouth is the best way to get information out about any creative work. If you like this, tell someone. Thank you.

“i cant wait until we get julain assange out of jail using Crypto. itll make all the pedophile money laundering worth it”

dril

Go directly to jail

Sam Bankman-Fried’s bail has been revoked for witness tampering — specifically, that he shared ex-girlfriend Caroline Ellison’s private diary with a New York Times reporter. This was the last straw for Judge Lewis Kaplan, who said the documents were “something that someone who has been in a relationship would be unlikely to share with anyone except to hurt and frighten the subject.”

Previously, Sam tried to get in touch via Signal with another witness, former FTX US lawyer Ryne Miller, about getting their stories straight — which nearly saw Sam’s bail revoked that time.

Our hero is currently at MDC Brooklyn — notoriously one of the worst jails in the federal system — but the government has asked that he be remanded at Putnam, where he’ll be allowed more computer access to prepare for his upcoming trial on October 2.

Inner City Press live-tweeted the entire hearing. Sam’s lawyer Mark Cohen immediately filed an appeal. [Twitter, archive; Doc 198, PDF; Notice of Appeal, PDF; Order; PDF

Prosecutors filed a superseding indictment against Sam on August 14. The new indictment contains seven of the thirteen original charges, removing anything that wasn’t explicitly in the Bahamas extradition agreement. Sam’s $100 million of political contributions are now listed as just another way he misspent customer money. The government also filed its motions in limine — pretrial motions on what evidence is admissible and so on. [Indictment, PDF; in limine, PDF; Doc 165, PDF]

Mathew Russell Lee of Inner City Press has been the man on the scene at the SDNY courthouse for Sam’s hearings. As well as live-tweeting hearings, he collects his writeups as Kindle books. His collection on Sam is just out, recounting the saga as he saw it happen from December 2022 to last week. [Amazon UK; Amazon US]

SEC appeals Ripple

The SEC has asked SDNY District Judge Analisa Torres to pause their case against Ripple so they can appeal her questionable decision on XRP sales to the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals. The SEC’s grounds for appeal is that there’s now a genuine intra-district judicial dispute over the issue. [Doc 887, PDF]

On July 13, Torres ruled that XRP is a security when it’s sold to sophisticated investors, but it’s not a security when sold to retail investors on exchanges – which is precisely backward from the past ninety years of US securities jurisprudence.

In the same courthouse, District Judge Jed Rakoff, who is overseeing the SEC lawsuit against Terraform Labs and its cofounder Do Kwon, flatly rejected Torres’ decision and ruled that Terraform’s LUNA and MIR coins may have been securities when sold to retail investors.

John Reed Stark notes: “For SEC lawyers like myself, Judge Jed Rakoff is arguably considered the most respected and experienced securities law jurist not only in the SDNY but perhaps in the entire U.S. federal court system.” [Twitter, archive]

The SEC proposes to file its opening brief on August 18. Ripple would have until September 1 to respond, and the SEC’s reply would be due a week later on September 8. This is quite soon, but Coinbase and Binance are both using the Ripple decision to support their defenses against their own SEC suits.

Prime Trust goes Chapter 11. You had one job!

Crypto custodian Prime Trust filed for bankruptcy protection in Delaware on August 14. Prime halted withdrawals in late June after Nevada regulators put the company into receivership as insolvent.

How did Prime fall insolvent? They lost the keys to a pile of the crypto they were supposed to be keeping safe. This happened in December 2021. You had one job, guys!

From December 2021 until March 2022, Nevada says that Prime used customer funds to buy additional crypto. But for a year and a half, Prime just lied and told everyone they still had their crypto.

Prime has between 25,000 and 50,000 creditors and liabilities of up to $500 million. The firm’s top fifty creditors have claims of $145 million — including the largest claim of $55 million. [Business Wire; Stretto

Knives out at TrueUSD

Archblock, formerly TrustLabs trading as TrustToken, created TUSD, a supposedly asset-backed $3 billion stablecoin. It then sold TrueUSD to Justin Sun’s Tron in late 2020 — but the connection to Tron has always been a bit murky, and TrustLabs has never been upfront about who the coin’s actual owner was.

TrustLabs said the new owner was Techteryx, “an Asia-based consortium” — though TrustLabs/Archblock still managed TUSD until July 2023. [Medium, 2020, archive; Twitter, archive]

Alameda Research was the largest redeemer of TUSD. FTX listed TUSD when they knew that TrustLabs was misrepresenting who owned it. 

TrueUSD’s main custodian was Prime Trust — and Prime was also its main fiat on-and-off ramp for the US banking system. Prime Trust was thus Justin Sun’s main link to US banking. At least until Signature, Prime’s main banking partner, collapsed in March.

We wrote previously about how the TUSD coin seems pretty clearly unbacked and was being used by someone in the vicinity of Binance to pump the price of bitcoin earlier this year.

Archblock is now doing a merger to move the company’s domicile from the US to Switzerland, for unclear reasons. [Blockhead]

Daniel Jaiyong (“Jai”) An, co-founder of TrustLabs/Archblock, is not happy with this merger and move. An is suing Archblock and its executives: Rafael Cosman, co-founder and board member; Alex De Lorraine, COO and former board member; and Tom Shields, former chairman of the board. 

The complaint was filed pro se on July 14 in Delaware, meaning An did not hire an attorney. He wrote the 58-page complaint himself — and it shows. [DLNews; complaint, PDF

An was in the midst of negotiating the sale of TrueUSD to Techteryx, whose contact was Justin Sun of Tron. In fact, An describes the sale as being to Tron.

So, yes — TrueUSD is run by Justin Sun, if you ever doubted it.

TrustLabs got $32 million from investors in a 2018 accredited investor ICO under SEC Regulation D for a token called TRU. Investors included Andreessen Horowitz, BlockTower Capital, Danhua Capital, Jump Capital,* ZhenFund, Distributed Global, Slow Ventures, GGV Capital, and Stanford-StartX.

*Update: Although An mentions Jump Capital in his complaint, Jump Crypto wrote us to say it wasn’t Jump Capital, but Jump Crypto, a division of Jump Trading Group, who made the investment. 

An says that by January 2020, it was clear that the plan in the TRU white paper would never pass SEC muster. He wanted to pay the investors back, as the SEC would surely require – but he says that his cofounder Cosman blocked this. The other shareholders voted An out in July 2020.

TrustLabs finally issued the TRU token in November 2020, repurposed as the native token of their TrueFi lending protocol. An alleges the other executives enriched themselves with TRU tokens — but not him.

An says the company threatened him with legal action if he informed investors what the company was doing. An then filed as a whistleblower with the SEC. He claims the company has retaliated against him for doing so.

Several paragraphs claim past criminal actions by Cosman.

An remains a shareholder in Archblock. He wants the merger blocked and $94.32 million in damages.

Data Finnovation notes that if An’s allegations are true, then FTX knew since 2020 that TrueUSD was owned by Tron — because Tron’s lawyer Can Sun was working on the deal and Can Sun later ended up working for FTX under Daniel Friedberg. Remember that FTX minted nearly all the tethers on Tron in the same time period. [Twitter, archive; Medium, 2022]

Worldcoin wants your eyeballs

Sam Altman is the founder and CEO of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. Worldcoin is Altman’s proof-of-eyeball cryptocurrency.

Altman promotes Worldcoin as a way to end poverty — and not just a way for him to collect huge amounts of biometric data. In exchange for giving up your iris scan, you’ll get 25 free Worldcoins (WLD). [CoinDesk

Worldcoin operators use “orbs” to scan eyeballs. The operators get paid in tethers. [MIT Technology Review, 2022]

Since the Worldcoin project launched on July 24, throngs of people in Kenya have been queuing up to get their eyeballs scanned — lured by free Worldcoin tokens. 

The problem is converting WLD into actual spendable money. The Worldcoin app has no direct withdrawal option — so the Kenyan users have to trade their WLD for USDT on Binance or put their trust in random over-the-counter buyers. So Worldcoin has become a honeypot for scammers: [Rest of World

“There’s no regulation in the space, and the people receiving the free tokens don’t have enough information. What do you expect?” Evrard Otieno, a Nairobi-based crypto trader and software developer, told Rest of World. “It’s just another opportunity for traders to make some money in the market.”

Days after the Worldcoin launch, the Communications Authority of Kenya and the Office of the Data Protection Commission ordered Worldcoin to suspend operations while they reviewed the project’s privacy protections. [Twitter, archive]

Kenyan police then raided the Worldcoin Nairobi warehouse on August 5 and seized the orbs. [KahawaTungu]. 

Data watchdogs in Britain, France, and Germany are also investigating Worldcoin for similar reasons. [ICO; Reuters]

The WLD token launched at $3.58 but had crashed to a low of $1.76 by August 14. WLD trades only against USDT and mostly on Binance. [CoinDesk; CoinGecko

Worldcoin’s investors, who have collectively put in $125 million, include the usual suspects — Andreessen Horowitz, Coinbase Ventures, Digital Currency Group, Sam Bankman-Fried, and Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn. [Crunchbase]

Hex enduction hour

Hex is an ERC-20 token that doesn’t do anything. Hex was promoted widely, even internationally on billboards, by a fellow called Richard Heart (or Richard Schueler to the tax man).

Hex promised stupendous yield rates. You bought Hex with ETH, then you staked the Hex, then you got paid interest in Hex. The website called Hex the “first high-interest blockchain certificate of deposit” that “was built to be the highest appreciating asset that has ever existed in the history of man.”

To “stake” your Hex, you would send it to … the Ethereum genesis address, 0x0. That is, you would throw your Hex into a black hole from which it could never be recovered. The Hex smart contract would then pay you Hex tokens in the future, apparently.

The SEC has finally sued Heart over Hex, PulseChain (a fork of Ethereum), and PulseX (a fork of UniSwap). They allege that Heart raised over $1 billion from these three unregistered securities offerings beginning in 2019. [SEC press release; Complaint, PDF]

The SEC says that Heart misappropriated investor funds to buy luxury sports cars, Rolex watches, and a 555-carat diamond, known as “The Enigma,” which he purchased in February 2022 in a Sotheby’s auction. Sotheby’s accepted ETH for the purchase. Heart was famous for promoting Hex with photos of himself showing off his wealth.

Heart has an unfortunate past of selling email spam software in the 2000s. He even called himself the Spam King. Bennett Haselton of peacefire.org successfully sued Heart in 2002 under Washington anti-spam laws for sending junk emails with deceptive headers. [ZDNet, 2002, archive; Panama Guide, 2007, archive]

David went on Richard Heart’s livestream in early 2020. David talked about books a bit, then Richard went into his sales pitch for Hex. Richard is a very charming and likable fellow, but in that particular way that cautions you not to let a penny of your cash within a mile of him. [YouTube, 2020]

This bank failure is fine, nothing to see here

A fourth US bank fell over this year — Heartland Tri-State Bank of Elkhart in Kansas, a small bank with just $139 million in assets. David Herndon, the Kansas banking commissioner, closed Heartland on July 28 after it became insolvent because it was “apparently the victim of a huge scam.”

Herndon said he didn’t know what the scam was — but he said other banks in the state were not affected. Our psychic powers tell us he has an extremely good idea what happened. The FBI is on the case.

The FDIC had to pay $54 million out of its deposit insurance fund – more than Heartland’s entire $48 million loan portfolio. [FT, free with login]

An employee of the bank said all workers at the bank are still employed, but Shan Hanes, the president and CEO, is no longer there. The bank was handed over to Dream First Bank as a growing concern. 

Everyone has been careful to note that the bank fell due to a “huge scam” and definitely not the sort of thing that took out Silvergate Bank, Silicon Valley Bank, and Signature Bank. The “scam” was first mentioned in an August 4 story in American Banker. [Kansas Reflector; FDIC; American Banker]

Still only good news for bitcoin

The SEC is suing Binance. BAM (Binance US) wants to block further discovery and depositions, because they’ve given the SEC so much information toward the consent order they had to be beaten into. BAM demands only four depositions of BAM employees, no depositions of BAM’s CEO or CFO, and no matters outside the consent order. We suspect that Binance doesn’t have some of the perfectly reasonable stuff the SEC has asked for, such as non-existent financial accounts — so Binance is resorting to the Tether defense. John Reed Stark thinks the SEC will largely prevail. [Doc 95, PDF; Twitter, archive]

The SEC sued Bittrex in April for listing securities without registering as an exchange. Bittrex has now settled with the SEC. They will pay $14.4 million disgorgement, $4 million prejudgment interest, and a $5.6 million civil penalty. [Press release

CoinDesk is laying off 20 people from editorial — 45% of the editorial staff, or 16% of all staff – to prepare for its sale to the Peter Vessenes and Matt Roszak consortium. We’re pretty sure everyone at CoinDesk is furiously updating their resumes right now. [The Block; TechCrunch]

Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis, several lobbyists and academics, and venture capital firms a16z and Paradigm have filed amicus briefs urging the SEC to drop its lawsuit against Coinbase. These mostly repeat Coinbase’s arguments. [Doc 48, PDF; Doc 50, PDF; Doc 53, PDF; Doc 55, PDF; Doc 59, PDF; Doc 60, PDF; Doc 62, PDF]

Kai Lentit of “Programmers Are Also Human” on YouTube goes to Web3 Berlin. “Where people without jobs ask people without companies for jobs.” [YouTube]

Crypto collapse: FTX family subpoenas, SBF witness tampering, Celsius bids revealed, more crypto banking woes

  • By Amy Castor and David Gerard

FTX: It’s a family affair

FTX’s lawyers have questions. Specifically, they have questions for Sam Bankman-Fried’s brother Gabriel and his parents, Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried.

Joseph advised FTX. He recruited its first lawyers and joined FTX staff in meetings on Capitol Hill. When visiting the FTX offices in the Bahamas, he and Barbara stayed in a $16.4 million house with its title in their names. Barbara founded a political action committee called Mind the Gap, which received donations from FTX.

Gabriel launched Guarding Against Pandemics, an organization funded by Sam. Gabriel purchased a multimillion-dollar property in Washington D.C., which John Jay Ray III’s current FTX team believe was purchased using FTX customer funds.

Every member of Sam’s family had some involvement in FTX — and they aren’t responding to requests for documents. So Ray’s team and the Unsecured Creditors’ Committee (UCC) want to subpoena Joseph, Barbara and Gabriel under rule 2004. [Doc 579, PDF; Bloomberg]

We’ve detailed rule 2004 previously. Federal Rule of Bankruptcy 2004 allows tremendously broad discovery and deposition. A witness is not always entitled to attorney representation or cross-examination and has only a limited right to object to questions. 2004 exams are sometimes referred to as “fishing expeditions” — because they need to be.

Included in the same 2004 motion, Ray is also asking the court’s permission to subpoena Sam and several other FTX insiders, including FTX cofounders Gary Wang and Nishad Singh, former Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison, and former FTX COO Constance Wang. Along with SBF’s family, they have not been very responsive:

“Mr. Wang and Ms. Ellison expressly declined to provide the requested information, and Ms. Fried has ignored the Requests altogether. The Debtors have not received meaningful engagement or any response from Mr. Singh or Mr. Gabriel Bankman-Fried.”

Ray’s team are investigating the FTX hack on November 11-12, which saw $300 million in crypto siphoned off the exchange while crypto Twitter watched in horror. They’ve requested an order pursuant to Rule 2004 here too — under seal, because the information in the motion could “reveal or lead to evidence that will reveal the identity and activities of the perpetrator(s).” It sounds like they already have a very good idea who was behind the hack. [Doc 581, PDF]  

A mostly-unredacted list of FTX creditors is now available. It includes investment banks, such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan; media companies, such as the New York Times and Wall Street Journal; commercial airliners, including American, United, Southwest, and Spirit; as well as several large tech players, including Netflix, Apple, and Meta. Individual customers’ names remain withheld. [Doc 574, PDF

FTX objects to the US Trustee’s request to appoint an independent examiner. They argue an examiner would duplicate work that’s already underway by FTX, the UCC, law enforcement, and regulators. “Indeed, if history is a guide, the cost could near or exceed $100 million.” They point out that “it is difficult to imagine an examiner candidate whose qualifications exceed those of Mr. Ray.” Which is a good point. The UCC concurs. [Doc 573, PDF; Doc 571, PDF]

What’s a little witness tampering between friends?

SBF is playing fast and loose with potential witnesses in his criminal trial. He contacted “Witness-1,” the “current General Counsel of FTX US” (Ryne Miller) to work out a story with. We doubt Miller would want anything to do with such a scheme. But this was enough for the government to ask Judge Lewis Kaplan to modify Sam’s bail: [DOJ letter to judge, PDF]

“Specifically, the Government respectfully requests that the Court impose the following conditions: (1) the defendant shall not contact or communicate with current or former employees of FTX or Alameda (other than immediate family members) except in the presence of counsel, unless the Government or Court exempts an individual from this no-contact rule; and (2) the defendant shall not use any encrypted or ephemeral call or messaging application, including but not limited to Signal.”

SBF’s lawyers responded by pounding the table. Judge Kaplan has told both sides to chill. The government should get its reply in, with substantiation of its claims, by February 2. [letter, PDF; order, PDF]

Dirty Bubble has found another link between FTX and the fraud-riddled binary options industry. In September 2021, FTX purchased the ZUBR derivatives exchange for $11 million. The exchange was registered in Gibraltar. By the time Gibraltar rescinded ZUBR’s license, the exchange had no active customers. The exchange was a collaboration between Belarusian binary options and crypto “billionaire” Viktor Prokopenya and his former business partner Said Gutseriev, the son of one of Russia’s wealthiest oligarchs. [Dirty Bubble]  

(Update, March 15, 2023: Viktor Prokopenya tells us he “never had any commercial interest or other involvement in ZUBR.” Dirty Bubble has updated his story to note that FTX purchased ZUBR directly from Prokopenya’s business partner Said Gutseriev. Dirty also notes interesting connections between ZUBR and Prokopenya’s other entities in his story.) 

Would it surprise you to learn that FTX made political donations to George Santos? [SFGate]

Celsius Network: Let’s make more magic beans!

Celsius has rejected the Binance US bid for Celsius assets, and four other bids. In the January 23 hearing, Ross Kwasteniet of Kirkland & Ellis, speaking for Celsius, said the bids “have not been compelling.”

Instead, Celsius have concocted a plan to reorganize into a publicly traded company and issue a new “Asset Share Token” to creditors. Those following the Celsius disaster will recognise this as Alex Mashinsky’s very dumb and bad Kelvin Plan from September 2022.

Creditors weren’t told about the other bids. As it happened, Tiffany Fong — Celsius creditor and YouTuber — got all the bids in a leak in December. Bidders included Binance US, Bank To The Future (Simon Dixon), Galaxy Digital, Cumberland DRW, and NovaWulf. Fong posted full text of the leaked bids. [Substack; Youtube

  • Binance US: buy just the crypto, assume liabilities (with a haircut); excludes FTT, CEL, and other illiquid trash tokens. Pay $15 million cash.
  • Bank to the Future: crypto returned to customers pro rata. Other Celsius assets to special-purpose vehicles, customers get an ownership share. Cash to be raised through rights offering to creditors.
  • Galaxy Digital: Acquire illiquid assets and staked ETH. Pay $66.8 million cash.
  • Cumberland DRW: Purchase certain tokens and portfolio of alternative investments, excluding CEL. $1.8 billion total payment, includes various haircuts.
  • NovaWulf: Transfer substantially all assets and businesses to SEC-compliant NewCo, 100% owned by the creditors. Issue revenue share tokens. NovaWulf to pay $60-120 million, mostly in tokens. This is also a version of the Kelvin plan.

Many ad hoc creditors were disappointed that the Binance bid was rejected — but it shouldn’t be surprising, given the issues that Binance is already having with its bid for Voyager.

Frankly, we don’t think the other bids look all that great either — they’re fanciful coiner dreams that first assume the crypto market is healthy, which it isn’t.

We think Celsius should have just liquidated in July rather than taking several months and handing millions of dollars to bankruptcy professionals to get to the same place.

Banks

Silvergate is short on cash, so it’s suspended dividend payments on its preferred stock. [Business Wire

The stock in question (NYSE:SI) is going down the toilet. It’s crashed from $220 in November 2021 to below $14 in January 2023. Signature Bank (NASDAQ: SBNY) has gone from $365 to $127 over the past year.

Moonstone Bank says that “recent events” — FTX tried to use them as a financial laundromat — and “the changing regulatory environment around crypto businesses” — the regulators are on the warpath — have prompted it to ditch the “innovation-driven business model” it adopted in recent years. [WSJ, paywall

Federal bank regulators are not keen on dodgy crypto banks authorized by captured Wyoming state regulators. Custodia Bank can’t get a Fed account: [Federal Reserve]

“The Board has concluded that the firm’s application as submitted is inconsistent with the required factors under the law. Custodia is a special purpose depository institution, chartered by the state of Wyoming, which does not have federal deposit insurance. The firm proposed to engage in novel and untested crypto activities that include issuing a crypto asset on open, public and/or decentralized networks.”

Crypto.com’s old gateway for GBP and EUR was Transactive Systems of Lithuania. Transactive has been cut off by the Bank of Lithuania, after it found “significant violations and shortcomings of the Law on the Prevention of Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing.” Transactive had apparently been giving accounts to a long list of low-quality institutions in low-quality jurisdictions. Transactive can no longer serve financial institutions, forex, or crypto clients. They also got cut off from the UK Faster Payments system. Your EUR and GBP sent to Crypto.com via Transactive are probably now stuck. [Twitter; Offshore CorpTalk; Bank of Lithuania, in Lithuanian]  

Before Crypto.com got kicked off Silvergate, it used to get US dollar deposits via an oddly roundabout method: customers would send USD to Circle’s account at Silvergate, and Circle would mint that much USDC and send the USDC to Crypto.com. It is possible this was not in full compliance with KYC and AML regulations. [Twitter; crypto.com, archive]

Other happy little accidents

London-based crypto exchange Luno, a subsidiary of DCG, is laying off 35% of its staff. About 330 employees will be let go from the firm, which has offices in Africa, Asia, and Europe. [WSJ, paywall; archive

DeFi volumes are right down. The amount of money (or “money”) involved has been flat for months, and — most importantly — you can’t get the ridiculous yields you could in the bubble. Oh no! Anyway. [Bloomberg]

Happy Penis Day, to those who celebrate

It was five years ago today, January 28, 2018, that the Prodeum initial coin offering took everyone’s money and disappeared, leaving behind only a new jargon term for “exit scam” or “rugpull.” You get a penis! And you get a penis! And you get a penis! Everybody gets a penis! [The Next Web, 2018]

Image: Sam Bankman-Sopranino and family.