The judge overseeing Sam Bankman-Fried’s criminal trial seemed skeptical of his efforts to dismiss some of the charges he faces.
Judge Lewis Kaplan, of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, asked the FTX founder’s defense team several questions about their motion to dismiss bank fraud, wire fraud and campaign finance charges, though he did not make a decision on the motions to dismiss during Thursday’s hearing.
“I’d like to congratulate you on an extraordinarily imaginative [defense],” the judge told one defense attorney who argued that the U.S. Department of Justice was trying to insert new legal theories into its prosecution.
Mark Cohen, another attorney for Bankman-Fried, argued before a packed courtroom that the campaign finance charge should be dismissed, or at least severed alongside other charges, on a technical detail.
“The operative document in extradition is the warrant of surrender,” Cohen said. “It does not list the campaign finance charge.”
Bankman-Fried never consented to be extradited on that charge, Cohen contended.
A prosecutor pushed back against this assertion later on, saying the U.S. had included the charge in its extradition request.
The warrant in question was addressed to Bahamian police, and while it may not have included the charge, the Bahamian court itself was aware of it, the prosecutor said.
Judge Kaplan seemed unconvinced. He seemed similarly skeptical about the defense’s efforts to dismiss bank and wire fraud charges.
Part of Thursday’s hearings focused on the possible timeline through the start of the criminal trial. While the DOJ shared a proposed timeline, the judge said it didn’t give him enough time to review all of the materials he’d have to look at.
The judge also denied a number of motions made by the defense tied to discovery, including an effort to have the DOJ review FTX documents and materials.
Bankman-Fried’s attorneys filed to dismiss most of the charges laid out against him last month, arguing that there were a number of different reasons to grant the motions. Several of the motions to dismiss focused on claimed legal issues, including failure to state an offence or allege valid property rights.
Bankman-Fried also sought to dismiss some charges brought after he was extradited to the U.S. on grounds that the Bahamas hadn’t consented to them.
Bankman-Fried was arrested last December on eight initial charges, but prosecutors have added another five through multiple superseding indictments. Bankman-Fried’s attorneys have argued that under the U.S.’s extradition treaty with the Bahamas, the Bahamas’ government needs to sign off on the charges brought post-extradition. On Tuesday, the Bahamas Supreme Court ruled that he should have an opportunity to argue against the country approving the additional charges.
Late Wednesday night, prosecutors agreed to hold off on these added charges until the Bahamas signed off.
Prosecutors pushed back against the other motions, saying the defense’s arguments didn’t carry enough weight on the procedural issues.