Sam Bankman-Fried Now Has a Jury
A federal judge picked a dozen New Yorkers to try the FTX founder on fraud and conspiracy charges.
A physician’s assistant, a librarian, a nurse and nine others will decide if Sam Bankman-Fried committed fraud.
Judge Lewis Kaplan on Wednesday announced a 12-person jury that will determine the former FTX CEO’s fate in a criminal case in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. Jury selection wrapped up early in the trial’s second day.
Read all of CoinDesk's SBF trial coverage here.
During voir dire, just under 50 people told the courtroom their ages, occupations, educational backgrounds, and other details. The potential jurors included a former prosecutor, a retired corrections officer, a flight attendant and multiple employees of the Metro-North commuter rail line.
To some, the trial of Sam Bankman-Fried has become by proxy a trial of the whole crypto industry following the excesses that led to last year’s crash. To insiders, the centralized and opaque FTX exchange embodied everything crypto was supposed to stand against, and Bankman-Fried is merely the most famous and wiliest of a long line of tourists who enter the market during bull runs and ruin it for everyone.
Opening statements are expected to begin momentarily.
More For You
‘The banks will not accept it’: Dimon escalates battle over stablecoin rewards in CLARITY Act debate

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon criticized Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and warned the current CLARITY Act framework could ultimately fail, as banks and crypto firms clash over whether stablecoin issuers should be allowed to offer yield-bearing rewards that resemble bank deposits.
What to know:
- JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon criticized Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and warned that the latest CLARITY Act draft could fail if lawmakers do not address banks’ concerns over stablecoin regulation on Friday.
- Dimon argued that the bill would let stablecoin issuers effectively pay interest on deposits without bank-style protections, predicting...











