NY Times ripped for ‘softball article’ on crypto fraudster Sam Bankman-Fried
The New York Times got blowback over an article it published on Sam Bankman-Fried, with critics slamming it as a puff piece on the accused crypto fraudster.
The Times quoted Bankman-Fried extensively for a story whose
headline reads: “How Sam Bankman-Fried’s Crypto Empire Collapsed.” The article
describes Bankman-Fried as “SBF,” noting that he spoke to the newspaper in an
interview on Sunday.
According to the article by Times crypto and fintech
reporter David Yaffe-Bellany, Bankman-Fried seemed “surprisingly calm” in the
interview, which lasted until after midnight.
“You would’ve thought that I’d be getting no sleep right
now, and instead I’m getting some,” Bankman-Fried, whose company was worth as
much as $32 billion a year ago, told the Times. “It could be worse.”
Matt Novak, a media critic with the news site Gizmodo,
writes that Yaffe-Bellany “lays out the facts in ways that are clearly
beneficial to SBF’s version of the story and leaves many of his highly
questionable assertions with “It reads like if the Times had conducted an
interview with Bernie Madoff after his ponzi scheme collapsed and ultimately
suggested he just made some bad investments,” Novak writes.
In the Times interview, Bankman-Fried declined to go into
details about FTX’s handling of customer assets, which were apparently used to
make risky bets through a subsidiary, Alameda Research.
Bankman-Fried told the Times that Alameda Research, which
was run by Bankman-Fried’s on-again-off-again girlfriend Caroline Ellison,
amassed a large margin position on FTX, which means it had borrowed money from
the company.
“It was substantially larger than I had thought it was,”
Bankman-Fried told the Times. “And in fact the downside risk was very
significant.”out proper context or even the most minimal amount of pushback.”
“Had I been a bit more concentrated on what I was doing, I
would have been able to be more thorough,” Bankman-Fried added during his
interview with the Times. “That would have allowed me to catch what was going
on on the risk side.”
On Twitter, reaction to the Times story was scathing.
“Disgraceful reporting by the @nytimes on FTX,” one Twitter
user tweeted.
“It portrays SBF as a charitable entrepreneur who went under
and does not mention the words fraud, criminal, substance abuse, friends &
family Bahamas KYC racket, hack, stolen funds or wiped servers anywhere.”
Novak points out that Bankman-Fried expressed little remorse
in the interview. The FTX founder told the Times that his crypto exchange
company “expanded too quickly” and that he “missed the warning signs.”
Reuters reported that at least $4 billion of FTX funds,
including customer assets, were used to fund Alameda Research’s activities — an
apparent violation of US securities laws.
Gizmodo also slammed the Times for its
“crypto-industry-friendly way of talking about” FTT, the digital coin that FTX
created in order to “facilitate trading on its platform.”
FTX’s collapse was hastened after Changpeng Zhao, the CEO of
rival Binance, announced on Twitter earlier this month that he was selling his
cache of FTT — this just three years after Zhao bought a 20% stake in FTX.
The token’s price collapsed 80% over the next two days and a
torrent of outflows from the exchange gathered pace, blockchain data show.
“In reality, FTT was created by SBF for the same reason that
any other cryptocurrency has been created: as a speculative asset that allows
early investors to extract wealth from people who place money into the asset
after the price has soared,” Gizmodo’s Novak writes.
Zhao’s tweet, which was posted after he learned that
Bankman-Fried had been urging US regulators to target Binance, alarmed FTX
customers who rushed to withdraw their deposits from the exchange.
Bankman-Fried told the Times that he regretted targeting
Zhao, saying it “was not a good strategic move on my part.”
“I was pretty frustrated at a lot of what I saw happening,
but I should’ve understood that it was not a good decision of me to express
that,” Bankman-Fried told the Times.
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