Nishad Singh, former engineering director of FTX, was sentenced to time served and three years of supervised release for misappropriating user funds and violating campaign finance laws.
During an October 30 hearing in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, Judge Lewis Kaplan noted that Singh’s involvement in the FTX fraud was significantly less than that of other executives, including former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried and Caroline Ellison.
Singh expressed deep remorse, while his lawyers argued that most fraudulent activities were driven by Bankman-Fried and Ellison. Singh had cooperated with authorities, which prosecutors urged the judge to consider, highlighting his substantial assistance in the ongoing investigation into FTX’s operations.
The hearing also featured a denial from Seth Melamed, former COO of FTX Japan, regarding Singh’s claims about their communication on safeguarding funds.
As the legal proceedings continue, the FTX case remains a focal point in discussions about accountability in the cryptocurrency industry.
The final sentencing for FTX co-founder Gary Wang is scheduled for November 20, and Bankman-Fried’s legal team is actively appealing his conviction, adding further layers to this complex saga.
An effort by Bitcoin SV investors to seek billions in compensation from major crypto exchanges has largely fallen flat in the UK Court of Appeal.
A previously undisclosed security breach has exposed sensitive user data of nearly 70,000 Coinbase customers, following what appears to be an internal compromise involving bribed support staff.
Braden Karony, once the public face of SafeMoon, has been found guilty in a major fraud case involving the misuse of billions in investor funds.
Panic swept through decentralized markets on Thursday after a suspected vulnerability in Cetus Protocol triggered a massive liquidity drain across several Sui-based tokens.