Unlike his House counterpart, Sen. Sherrod Brown, Chairman of the Senate Banking Committee had no compunctions about threatening the founder of FTX, and no interest in cajoling him.
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Sen. Sherrod Brown didn't see any reason to try the carrot out on FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried before turning to the stick.
The Democratic chairman of the Senate Banking Committee did go through the formality of inviting Bankman-Fried to testify at a Dec. 14 hearing titled "Crypto Crash: Why the FTX Bubble Burst and the Harm to Consumers."
In the next breath, Sen. Brown's "invitation" letter said he "must answer" for "the clear misuse of client funds" and then accused him of having "misappropriated" those funds and "orchestrated a cover-up."
Bankman-Fried allegedly allowed the now-bankrupt FTX exchange to try to bail out his trading firm, Alameda Research, by secretly loaning it as much as $10 billion belonging to more than one million FTX customers — who had been told their funds would not be loaned out.
Do it Now
Sen. Brown gave Bankman-Fried until 5 p.m. ET on Dec. 8 to arrange to testify. He added:
"If you chose not to appear, I am prepared, along with Ranking [Republican] Member Pat Toomey, to issue a subpoena to compel your testimony."
The letter was sent to Bankman-Fried via his newly hired counsel, Mark Cohen, a former federal prosecutor who defends clients in both civil and criminal matters.
Whether Cohen — who recently defended Ghislane Maxwell, the sex trafficker convicted of procuring underage girls for the late Jeffrey Epstein — will advise Bankman-Fried to testify is unclear, but then, the frizzy-haired one-time golden boy of crypto does have a history of telling his attorneys to "go f*** themselves."