Michelle Bond, a former Ripple executive, faces charges from the U.S. Department of Justice for allegedly participating in illegal campaign contributions.
Bond and her partner, Ryan Salame, a former executive at FTX, are accused of improperly financing Bond’s 2022 congressional campaign for New York’s first district. Salame is said to have arranged a $400,000 payment from FTX to support Bond’s unsuccessful campaign, which ended in the primary elections.
Bond had been advised by a political consulting firm to fund her campaign personally, but she reportedly received $400,000 from FTX as part of a “consulting agreement” without providing any actual services.
Salame, who was a close associate of the disgraced FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, was sentenced to seven years in prison earlier this year. Bankman-Fried himself is serving a 25-year sentence following his conviction for orchestrating a billion-dollar fraud last November.
Salame has recently requested a judge to block Bond’s indictment or overturn his own conviction. Bond, who joined Ripple as the global head of government relations in 2019, left the company the following year to become the CEO of the Association for Digital Asset Markets (ADAM).
A former Bank of America employee has admitted to playing a role in an international money laundering network that funneled millions of dollars through fraudulent bank accounts, according to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).
An international arrest warrant has been requested for Hayden Davis, co-creator of the LIBRA token, which became the center of a major political scandal in Argentina.
Chris Larsen, the co-founder of Ripple, suffered a significant financial blow in 2024 when he lost over $661 million worth of XRP due to a security breach in the password management system LastPass.
Venture capitalist and Mission Gate founder George Bachiashvili is now facing imprisonment in Georgia after a court revoked his bail.