Nishad Singh testifies to ‘excessive’ spending at Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial
The post Nishad Singh testifies to ‘excessive’ spending at Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Nishad Singh, the former director of engineering at FTX, testified in the case of ex-FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried on Oct. 16. During his testimony, Singh confessed to committing several crimes, such as fraud and campaign finance violations, which were purportedly carried out in collaboration with Bankman-Fried and others. Singh reached a plea deal with prosecutors in February, months after two other FTX associates did the same. Singh testified that his time at FTX made him a billionaire while admitting to receiving loans and spending exchange money on large purchases and donations. As testimony shifted to focus on Bankman-Fried, Singh described the FTX leader as a “formidable character” and said that he “came to distrust him.” Singh claimed that Bankman-Fried was the ultimate decision-maker for Alameda Research despite Caroline Ellison being the company’s CEO. Singh said that Bankman-Fried unilaterally spent Alameda’s funds and had one computer screen dedicated to Alameda. He added that Bankman-Fried threatened to fire Ellison from the firm. Singh describes spending as “excessive” Singh described Bankman-Fried’s spending as “excessive” and said that he would have complained of the spending’s “flashiness” if he had been fully aware of it. He went on to detail various investments. According to CNBC, spreadsheets showed that FTX spending included $1 billion to Genesis’ mining operations, $499 million to Anthropic’s AI safety goals, and $1.3 billion to celebrity sponsorship deals. Singh commented on millions of dollars spent on real estate, including an infamous penthouse purchase. Singh described the penthouse as “ostentatious,” while Bankman-Fried allegedly said that he would spend $100 million to end any drama around it. Other investments included hundreds of millions of dollars to the VC firm K5 and its operators. Singh described his opposition to the transfer and said that he asked if it could be reversed; Bankman-Fried supposedly told him…
The post Nishad Singh testifies to ‘excessive’ spending at Sam Bankman-Fried’s trial appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Nishad Singh, the former director of engineering at FTX, testified in the case of ex-FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried on Oct. 16. During his testimony, Singh confessed to committing several crimes, such as fraud and campaign finance violations, which were purportedly carried out in collaboration with Bankman-Fried and others. Singh reached a plea deal with prosecutors in February, months after two other FTX associates did the same. Singh testified that his time at FTX made him a billionaire while admitting to receiving loans and spending exchange money on large purchases and donations. As testimony shifted to focus on Bankman-Fried, Singh described the FTX leader as a “formidable character” and said that he “came to distrust him.” Singh claimed that Bankman-Fried was the ultimate decision-maker for Alameda Research despite Caroline Ellison being the company’s CEO. Singh said that Bankman-Fried unilaterally spent Alameda’s funds and had one computer screen dedicated to Alameda. He added that Bankman-Fried threatened to fire Ellison from the firm. Singh describes spending as “excessive” Singh described Bankman-Fried’s spending as “excessive” and said that he would have complained of the spending’s “flashiness” if he had been fully aware of it. He went on to detail various investments. According to CNBC, spreadsheets showed that FTX spending included $1 billion to Genesis’ mining operations, $499 million to Anthropic’s AI safety goals, and $1.3 billion to celebrity sponsorship deals. Singh commented on millions of dollars spent on real estate, including an infamous penthouse purchase. Singh described the penthouse as “ostentatious,” while Bankman-Fried allegedly said that he would spend $100 million to end any drama around it. Other investments included hundreds of millions of dollars to the VC firm K5 and its operators. Singh described his opposition to the transfer and said that he asked if it could be reversed; Bankman-Fried supposedly told him…
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