Feds seize $50 million from Farmington State Bank tied to Bankman-Fried
Jan. 24—Federal prosecutors have seized
Prosecutors unsealed court documents recently that they seized funds on
Federal prosecutors charged Bankman-Fried, who once headed the third-largest cryptocurrency exchange by volume, with several counts, including wire fraud, commodities fraud and fraud against investors.
As part of that investigation, prosecutors alleged that Bankman-Fried deposited several million dollars obtained through those activities at the 26th-smallest bank in America,
Investigators seized
Based on the most recent filings with the
"I really can't talk about that, whether its about our existing customers or the impacts," he said. "What I can say is the financial information about banks is public."
Customer deposits at the bank are insured by the
Farmington
Booth is quoted in the news release as saying the bank's "change in strategy reflects the impacts of recent events in the crypto assets industry and the resultant changing regulatory environment relating to crypto asset businesses."
The statement also told its customers that they had nothing to worry about regarding the bank's future.
"The return to its role as a community bank will be seamless for the bank's local customers in the Farmington community with no change or disruption of services," the statement said. "The bank ... has kept its balance sheet liquid and customer deposits have remained secure and fully accessible."
Booth, in an interview, said Farmington still has the same number of employees, 32, that it had before the name change.
"We are separating some of the focus and activities between our physical branch and Moonstone, which was more of a virtual branch," he said. "It's the same bank, the same legal entity."
The
Prosecutors alleged that Bankman-Fried devised "a scheme and artifice to defraud, and for obtaining money and property by means of false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises."
Prosecutors also seized about
Bankman-Fried's link to the tiny bank in a town of about 150 people south of
Before buying
Deltec was established to serve cryptocurrencies, which are used as unsecured units of exchange through computer networks that are not backed by governments or banks.
Deltec's top client is a company called Tether, which reportedly has
At it's peak, FTX had more than a million users and was the third-largest trader in digital currency by volume.
But that exchange collapsed
"I'm really sorry, again, that we ended up here," Bankman-Fried wrote on Twitter. "Hopefully things can find a way to recover. Hopefully this can bring some amount of transparency, trust, and governance to them. Ultimately hopefully it can be better for customers."
The bankruptcy raised new questions about the
The
According to
In 2021, after the charter was purchased by Chalopin, the bank added one more employee and listed total assets of
By September , the bank listed 26 employees and
Chalopin, the bank owner, said in a news release last spring that the
Those aspirations have been abandoned as
"We have decided not to continue with the digital
He also added that he wasn't aware of any other accounts, other than the one tied to Bankman-Fried, that had been seized by any government agencies.
"The sensitive nature of the ongoing investigation into FTX, that's not something I can go into," he said.
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