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Almost three years following the downfall of the crypto exchange FTX, legal confrontations involving its executives and their affiliates continue to develop. This week, Michelle Bond, the partner of former FTX Digital Markets co-CEO Ryan Salame, is set to return to court for an evidentiary hearing regarding her criminal case.
In a Sunday submission in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York (SDNY), Bond’s legal representatives requested a federal judge to permit her testimony despite objections from prosecutors.
On Friday, prosecutors had contended that it was improbable Bond would provide testimony pertinent to Salame’s plea agreement which involves claims of campaign finance misconduct. He is currently incarcerated for charges relating to his involvement in the company’s demise.
Salame’s plea arrangement sits at the core of Bond’s case concerning alleged campaign finance breaches. Prosecutors claimed that Salame directed $400,000 in funds linked to FTX to her campaign.
In August 2024, Bond faced charges of conspiracy to provoke unlawful campaign contributions, causing and receiving excessive campaign donations, as well as orchestrating an unlawful corporate contribution and conduit contribution. She has maintained her innocence regarding all charges.
“The government lacks the justification to pre-emptively prevent Ms. Bond from testifying, as her testimony is neither repetitive nor irrelevant,” stated her legal team. “The mindset of Ms. Bond and her spouse upon entering into the plea arrangement is directly relevant to the matters before the Court […]”
As one of five defendants named in the indictment of former FTX and Alameda Research leaders, Salame admitted guilt to conspiracy to make illegal political contributions and defraud the Federal Election Commission and conspiracy to conduct an unlicensed money transmitting operation.
He received a sentence of seven-and-a-half years in prison, where he began serving in October 2024.
After Salame’s guilty admission, his attorneys sought to annul his deal with US prosecutors, arguing that the arrangement depended on their decision to refrain from pursuing criminal charges against Bond. Ultimately, he withdrew the complaint, indicating that Bond would address the issue as part of her case.
Related: Judge questions if former FTX executive committed perjury in guilty admission
Returning to court after several months
The upcoming Thursday evidentiary hearing will mark the first occasion Bond returns to court after months of submissions regarding Salame’s agreement with the government.
Besides the possibility of Bond taking the stand, her attorneys have requested that former Assistant US Attorney Danielle Sassoon be called to testify. Sassoon was the chief prosecutor in the government’s case against former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and four other executives, including Salame.
Although Sassoon resigned in February after the Justice Department instructed her to cease a case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, Bond’s attorneys requested her presence to discuss “any promises or incentives made to Mr. Salame to plead guilty.”
The US Attorneys have not contested the motion, but have asked Bond’s legal team to provide “documentary proof” or testimony related to the plea agreement.
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