Sam Bankman-Fried's lawyer asks judge to reject 100-year recommended sentence

Sam Bankman-Fried's stunning fall from grace

Sam Bankman-Fried's lawyer is arguing that a suggested 100-year prison sentence for the FTX founder by an arm of the court is "grotesque" and "barbaric." Instead, the attorney said Tuesday that a term of a few years behind bars is appropriate for cryptocurrency crimes that the former cryptocurrency executive still disputes.

Attorneys for Bankman-Fried told the court that they believe a more appropriate sentence is 63 to 78 months, citing their client's medical conditions, which include autism, as well as his goals to improve the world through his now-defunct crypto exchange, according to the Wall Street Journal. 

One of his attorneys, Marc Mukasey, also said a report by Probation officers had improperly calculated federal sentencing guidelines to recommend a sentence just 10 years short of the maximum potential 110-year sentence.

Bankman-Fried, 31, has steadfastly maintained his innocence since the startling implosion of FTX, the crypto exchange he co-founded, amid an $8 billion shortfall in funds and allegations he had taken customer money to prop up his struggling hedge fund, Alameda Research. In November, the MIT grad was found guilty on seven counts of fraud, conspiracy and money laundering.

On March 28, Judge Lewis A. Kaplan will sentence the man prosecutors say cheated investors and customers of at least $10 billion in businesses he controlled from 2017 through 2022.

Bankman-Fried: "Non-violent offender"

Mukasey wrote Tuesday that the Probation office miscalculated federal sentencing guidelines to justify its recommendation. A proper sentence, Mukasey said, would be based on guidelines that would call for between five years and 6 1/2 years in prison, at most.

A spokesperson for prosecutors, who will respond in court papers in mid-March, declined comment. Mukasey noted, however, that prosecutors have agreed with the 100-year recommendation and say it was supported by trial evidence.

When Bankman-Fried's charitable works and his commitment to others are considered, an appropriate sentence would return him "promptly to a productive role in society," the lawyer said. Mukasey signed the 90-page document that was also worked on by four other lawyers.

Mukasey said that the Probation office "recommends that the Court sentence Sam to 100 years in prison. That recommendation is grotesque." He called on the judge to reject the "barbaric proposal" for a "brilliant, complex and humane person" who doesn't use drugs, rarely drinks and is a first-time offender.

"Sam is not the 'evil genius' depicted in the media or the greedy villain described at trial," Mukasey wrote. "Sam is a 31-year-old, first-time, non-violent offender, who was joined in the conduct at issue by at least four other culpable individuals, in a matter where victims are poised to recover — were always poised to recover — a hundred cents on the dollar."

"Wracked with remorse"

FTX was once the world's second-largest crypto exchange and Bankman-Fried seemed to be flying high with the purchase of Super Bowl advertising and endorsement from celebrities including comedian Larry David and NFL superstar quarterback Tom Brady.

After his arrest, though, Bankman-Fried's communications were found by the judge to be attempts to influence trial witnesses and he was jailed before trial.

For more than a half year, Bankman-Fried was permitted to live at home with his parents — both Stanford Law School professors — in Palo Alto, California, where he grew up.

Mukasey said the media portrayal of Bankman-Fried as a luxury-laden billionaire who craved wealth was wrong and he included a quote from his client's father, who said: "For anyone who knows Sam, the popular portrayal of him as a high-rolling, celebrity-seeking, CEO driven by greed is simply bizarre."

Mukasey also quoted Bankman-Fried's mother, who said her son "has been wracked with remorse for not having prevented the implosion of FTX and the damage that followed. It is, he has told me, the first thing he thinks about when he wakes up and the last thing he thinks about when he goes to sleep."

Mukasey wrote that Bankman-Fried "does not feel pleasure, or happiness, or joy, even when something very good happens to him," and that he was diagnosed in college with anhedonic depression and has been on antidepressant medication ever since.

Mukasey wrote that Bankman-Fried, regardless of his sentence, will never be totally free.

"He will be scorned by many people wherever he goes for the rest of his life," he said.

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