Pexels.com/Photon JPG
Main page News, Cryptocurrency Exchanges, FTX, Regulations

Federal prosecutors have asked a Manhattan judge to bar FTX founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, from accessing private messengers like Signal over allege witness tampering, CNBC first reported.

Subscribe to our Telegram channel to get daily short digests about events that shape the crypto world

In a letter to US District Judge, Lewis Kaplan, prosecutors said the disgraced crypto entrepreneur have tried to reach out to "current General Counsel of FTX US who may be a witness at trial," without naming him or her. The report notes that a former partner at Kirkland & Ellis, Ryne Miller, is currently working as counsel for FTX US.

According to the report, Bankman-Fried wrote to Millier the following message shortly after FTX's lawyers said they'd managed to recover $5 billion in crypto and cash:

"I would really love to reconnect and see if there's a way for us to have a constructive relationship, use each other as resources when possible, or at least vet things with each other."

FTX's Lawyers Ask Court to Question Bankman-Fried's Relatives Under Oath

The government wants to prevent Bankman-Fried from accessing not only Signal, but also any other encrypted messaging platforms. The court filing also reveals that ex-Alameda Research head, Caroline Ellison, said in her testimony that Bankman-Fried was aware that "many legal cases turn on documentation and it is more difficult to build a legal case if information is not written down or preserved."

Access more than 50 of the world's financial markets directly from your EXANTE account – including NASDAQ, London Stock Exchange and Tokyo Stock Exchange

Read also:
Strawberry Cake Media Corp. © 2024 Cookie Policy Editorial team Archive

ihodl.com is an illustrated edition about cryptocurrencies and financial markets.
Every day we publish the best materials for everyone interested in economy.