Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
NEWSMAKER-Bankman-Fried trial poses biggest test to date for crypto's top cop

By Luc Cohen

NEW YORK, Sept 29 (Reuters) - Sam Bankman-Fried's upcoming trial on fraud charges marks a major test for a broader crackdown on white collar crime led by Manhattan's top federal prosecutor: Damian Williams.

Upon taking office in late 2021 as the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Williams said "rooting out corruption in our financial markets" would be one of his top priorities - a familiar role for an office known as the main enforcer on Wall Street.

The Yale Law School graduate has since brought several indictments against former executives in the rough-and-tumble cryptocurrency space, as well as high-profile fraud charges against executives such as Charlie Javice of college financial aid platform Frank, Bill Hwang of Archegos Capital Management, and Joe Lewis, the billionaire former owner of an English soccer team. Javice, Hwang and Lewis have pleaded not guilty.

Bankman-Fried's will be the first of Williams' blockbuster white collar cases to go to trial.

The meteoric rise and even faster fall of the curly-haired, 31-year-old former billionaire who ran the FTX cryptocurrency exchange until its November 2022 collapse has captivated public attention, which will now be focused on how Williams' office handles the prosecution of the once-influential political donor accused of stealing billions of dollars in customer funds.

The cases Williams, 43, has brought so far show he has been a "steward" of the SDNY's longstanding priorities, said Kan Nawaday, who overlapped with Williams at the office.

"He's continuing the same type of rigor with pursuing cases, and pursuing noteworthy, righteous cases insofar as financial crimes and public corruption," said Nawaday, now a partner at law firm Venable.

Williams won a victory at trial this year against a former product manager at non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace OpenSea for insider trading, after earlier securing an insider trading guilty plea from a former Coinbase Global employee. Prosecutors had described the cases as the first insider trading cases brought involving digital assets.

"This office has brought a number of significant cases in this space," Williams said in July in announcing charges against Alex Mashinsky, another crypto executive. "The Southern District of New York has historically been at the forefront of enforcement in any new area."

Bankman-Fried and Mashinsky have each pleaded not guilty. Williams, through a spokesperson, declined an interview request.