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Judge predicts the public won't be as mean to Caroline Ellison now that she's been sentenced

Natalie Musumeci,Jacob Shamsian   

Judge predicts the public won't be as mean to Caroline Ellison now that she's been sentenced
Tech3 min read
  • Caroline Ellison was sentenced to two years in prison for her role in the FTX fraud scheme.
  • A judge praised Ellison's cooperation against Sam Bankman-Fried and noted the public scrutiny she's faced.

The judge who sentenced Caroline Ellison — the ex-top executive for Sam Bankman-Fried's crypto hedge fund — said he considered the "unusual" public scrutiny of her life before he ordered her to serve two years behind bars for her role in a massive fraud scheme.

In his remarks before handing down the sentence in a Manhattan federal courtroom, US District Judge Lewis Kaplan praised Ellison for cooperating in the prosecution against Bankman-Fried, the disgraced crypto mogul and her former romantic partner.

Addressing Ellison directly, the judge acknowledged her cooperation "has come at a serious price emotionally and personally" and predicted the backlash and scrutiny she's faced will "probably" die down.

"Every part of your life has turned inside out and public to an unusual degree," Kaplan said. "And now that's probably, hopefully going to relax."

Ellison, who pleaded guilty to conspiring with Bankman-Fried in the $11 billion fraud scheme, testified at his trial how the pair used Alameda Research, his hedge fund, to invest billions of dollars worth of assets secretly siphoned from customers of FTX, the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange Bankman-Fried controlled.

Kaplan ultimately sentenced Bankman-Fried to 25 years in prison. Though the judge spoke favorably about Ellison, he said that he could not let her off scot-free.

Ellison's lawyers and prosecutors each talked about the intense public glare that has upended her life ever since FTX collapsed in November 2022.

"Her physical appearance has been the subject of internet fascination and scrutiny," her lawyer Anjan Sahni told the judge at the Tuesday sentencing hearing.

"She essentially has been forced to live in hiding," he added.

Ahead of his trial last fall, Bankman-Fried leaked her private diary entries to The New York Times — leading Kaplan to accuse him of "witness tampering" and send him to jail.

Bankman-Fried's on-and-off romantic relationship with Ellison, which stretched back to their shared time at the trading firm Jane Street, was the subject of some of the evidence in the case.

In journal entries, Ellison talked about how she sought to impress Bankman-Fried, who rose to the heights of tech, finance, and politics at the helm of FTX.

"She had a crush on him from the beginning," her lawyer Anjan Sahni told the judge in the sentencing hearing. "And then she saw him achieve staggering success."

Ellison "could not bring herself to leave Bankman-Fried's orbit," Sahni said.

"I found myself drifting away," Ellison told the judge in her own remarks Tuesday. "I subordinated my own values to Bankman-Fried's end."

Kaplan said he believed Bankman-Fried "exploited" Ellison.

"You're a very strong person in some ways. But you're not inviolable," the judge said. "Somehow, for some reason — it's hard for me to understand — Mr. Bankman-Fried had your kryptonite. You were vulnerable and you were exploited."

Sahni said Ellison offered to give the government the rights to her life story so that she would never profit from any publicity she received.

Prosecutors, which asked for Ellison to receive zero time behind bars because of her cooperation, also considered the attention to be a factor in the punishment she's already faced.

"Numerous films and TV shows are in production about the downfall of FTX, which will only perpetuate the public scrutiny Ellison has faced to date," prosecutors wrote in a filing ahead of the sentencing hearing. "The Government cannot think of another cooperating witness in recent history who has received a greater level of attention and harassment."

While the judge praised Ellison's extensive cooperation, he said she still needed to spend time behind bars.

"For it to be a case this serious, to be a literal get-out-of-jail-free card — I cannot see a way to it," Kaplan said.


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