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FEC probe demanded after SBF ‘admitted’ making dark money donations

Sam Bankman-Fried previously told crypto vlogger Tiffany Fong that all his Republican donations "were dark."

A watchdog group has demanded an investigation into Sam Bankman-Fried's political donations, claiming the former FTX CEO admitted to donating tens of millions of dollars to Republicans under the table, in violation of federal law.

The Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) filed the complaint with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) on Dec. 8, citing comments made by Bankman-Fried in a Nov. 16 interview with cryptocurrency vlogger Tiffany Fong released via YouTube on Nov. 29.

CREW suggested in its complaint that wealthy donors often take advantage of the Citizen United ruling to evade federal disclosure laws by using intermediaries and claiming they were unaware of where the funds ended up, but that Bankman-Fried’s admission negates this plausible deniability. As CREW senior vice president and chief counsel Donald Sherman notes:

“Bankman-Fried said the quiet part out loud. He admitted that he violated federal laws designed to ensure Americans have transparency into those funding elections and now needs to be held accountable.”

CREW has asked the FEC to investigate the violation, and take any further action that is appropriate such as referring the matter to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution.

The group accused Bankman-Fried of “direct and serious violations of the Federal Election Campaign Act,” which requires the disclosure of political donations of over $200 a year.

Related: FTX’s Bankman-Fried to face market manipulation probe, Do Kwon chimes in

In the Nov. 16 interview with Fong, Bankman-Fried claimed to have “donated about the same to both parties." Given that he was the Democrats’ second largest donor, according to OpenSecrets, these “dark” donations appear to involve a substantial amount of money.

“All my Republican donations were dark,” SBF noted, before adding:

“The reason was not for regulatory reasons, it’s because reporters freak the fuck out if you donate to Republicans, they’re all super liberal. And I didn’t want to have that fight.”

Bankman-Fried has been on something of an apology tour since his fall from grace, making a variety of public appearances including interviews with The New York Times’ DealBook Summit, Good Morning America and plenty of Twitter Spaces.

He has repeatedly claimed that he is conducting these interviews against the advice of his lawyers, who have advised him to lay low and not say anything lest his comments land him in hot water.

No Middleman, No Problem? What 2025 Holds for Decentralized Exchanges

BlackRock CEO: FTX Token caused downfall, but tech still revolutionary

Despite taking issue with tokens created by centralized exchanges, BlackRock’s CEO sees securities tokenization as the next evolution of the financial market.

The CEO of the worlds largest asset management firm, BlackRock, believes that the reason why FTX failed is because it created its own FTX Token (FTT), which was centralized and therefore at odds with the “whole foundation of what crypto is.”

Larry Fink, who serves as chairman and CEO of the $8 billion investment company — made the remarks during New York Times’ 2022 Dealbook Summit held on Nov. 30, and added that despite his belief that FTX's own-created token caused its downfall, he believes that crypto and the blockchain technology which underpins it will be revolutionary.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink speaking at the 2022 DealBook Summit. Source: New York Times.

Centralized exchange tokens, such as Binance Coin (BNB) and fellow exchange Crypto.com’s Cronos (CRO), account for over $57 billion of the $862 billion total crypto market cap. Fink suggested that he was still skeptical of these tokens and believes “most of these companies [controlling the tokens] are not going to be around.”

Later in the interview with New York Times’ journalist Andrew Sorkin, Fink said that while he sees Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) as being the cause for the previous evolution of investing, he believes that tokenization will be behind the next, noting:

“I believe the next generation for markets, the next generation for securities, will be tokenization of securities.”

He then elaborated on some of the potential benefits of tokenization, suggesting that it would change the investing ecosystem, as rather than trusting banks, “instantaneous settlement” would be possible on distributed ledgers that show every owner and seller of securities.

“Think about instantaneous settlement [of] bonds and stocks, no middlemen, we’re going to bring down fees even more dramatically," he explained. 

Related: Sam Bankman-Fried confronted over the fall of FTX in live interview

Fink admitted that BlackRock had a $24 million investment in FTX, but refused to speculate on allegations that they and other venture capital firms such as Sequoia Capital had failed to do the proper due diligence on FTX.

”Right now we can make all the judgment calls that it looked like there was some misbehavior of major consequence [...] if you look at the Sequoia’s of the world they’ve had unbelievable returns over a long period of time, I am sure they did due diligence.”

BlackRock has been an active investor in the crypto industry since 2020. Its latest move was revealed on Nov. 3, in which it announced it would be managing USD Coin (UDSC) issuer Circle’s reserve fund.

Meanwhile, on Sept. 27, it announced the launch of an ETF giving investors exposure to 35 blockchain-related companies.

No Middleman, No Problem? What 2025 Holds for Decentralized Exchanges