Former FTX executive Ryan Salame begins his seven and a half year prison sentence

Quick Take

  • At the last minute, Ryan Salame’s lawyers asked the court if he could start his prison time on Dec. 7 to get medical care after being injured by a dog over the summer.
  • The judge denied Salame’s request and said he appears to have “substantially recovered,” pointing to a recent interview he did with Tucker Carlson.

Former FTX executive Ryan Salame has begun serving his prison sentence of seven and a half years at a Maryland prison, records show. 

Salame, previously the co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, is in custody at FCI Cumberland in Maryland as of Saturday morning, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website. The prison is a "medium security federal correctional institution with an adjacent minimum security satellite camp." It has over 1000 inmates, according to its website.

On Thursday, Salame shared a post on LinkedIn, seemingly poking fun at his situation.

"I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position as Inmate at FCI Cumberland," Salame posted.

Salame pled guilty in September to conspiring to make unlawful political contributions as well as conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business. He worked closely with former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried. Bankman-Fried was sentenced in March to almost 25 years in prison following a criminal fraud trial late last year. Former Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison was sentenced last month to two years for her role in the collapse of FTX.

Dog bite delay denied

At the last minute, Salame's lawyers asked the court on Wednesday if he could start his prison time on Dec. 7 to get medical care after being injured by a dog over the summer. Salame previously asked for his prison time to be pushed back from August to October to get urgent surgery following the incident with the dog, which the court granted. Salame's lawyers said he saw a doctor on July 3 and was evaluated "after sustaining a dog-bite injury to the face," according to a previous filing.

U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan denied Salame's ask on Friday and said it seemed as though Salame had "substantially recovered," pointing to an interview he did with conservative political commentator Tucker Carlson.

"He recently participated in a videotaped interview with Tucker Carlon, during which he similarly appears physically recovered and entirely unimpaired while answering questions," Kaplan said.

During that interview, Salame criticized the judge and said he "grabbed all these things that just weren't true," including when Salame said he pulled out money before FTX filed for bankruptcy. During his sentencing hearing, Judge Kaplan said Salame put himself first, saying, "I’m getting in the lifeboat first. To heck with all those customers," according to multiple news reports.

"The whole thing was odd, the whole experience of it," Salame said.

Salame's partner, Michelle Bond, also faces charges. She was criminally charged in August with allegedly conspiring in an unlawful campaign finance scheme.

Bond ran unsuccessfully for a U.S. House seat in 2022 in New York's 1st district as a Republican. Soon after, prosecutors said Bond's romantic partner, who was a "high-level executive at a Bahamas-based subsidiary of a now-defunct cryptocurrency exchange," organized a "sham consulting agreement," between Bond and the exchange.

Through that agreement, Bond was paid $400,000 which she then allegedly used to unlawfully finance her campaign, according to the indictment.

Salame has aggressively pushed back against Bond's charges, accusing prosecutors of using plea negotiations to "threaten" his partner and mother of his eight-month-old child, adding he pleaded guilty only on the promise that the government would drop its investigation of Bond. Salame moved to dismiss the indictment of his partner or, if not, overturn his conviction. Prosecutors have said Salame's request is "factually baseless" and say they clearly laid out that his guilty plea would not stop an investigation into Bond during a meeting in May 2023.

Salame said in his interview with Carlson that he plans to teach a course about digital assets and the economy while in prison.


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Sarah is a reporter at The Block covering policy, regulation and legal happenings. Before, Sarah was a reporter with CQ Legal writing about securities regulation, which is where she first started reporting on crypto. Sarah has also written for The Bond Buyer and American Banker, among other finance-related publications. She graduated from the University of Missouri and earned a degree in print and digital journalism. Sarah is based in Washington D.C., and is an avid coffee lover. You can follow her on Twitter @ForTheWynn.

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