Could FTX CEO and Democrat megadonor Sam Bankman-Fried get 'Epsteined'?



On "The News & Why It Matters," BlazeTV hosts Sara Gonzales and Alex Stein, along with actor and director Matthew Marsden, talked about the ongoing saga of Sam Bankman-Fried, the former CEO and founder of FTX cryptocurrency who is accused of stealing billions of dollars from the customers of his now-collapsed company.

Bankman-Fried faces up to life in prison on charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to commit commodities fraud, conspiracy to commit securities fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and conspiracy to defraud the Federal Election Commission and commit campaign finance violation. He allegedly used billions of dollars from FTX customers for his own personal use, to repay loans owed by Alameda Research, and to donate millions of dollars to political campaigns.

He was also the Democrats' second-biggest campaign donor, second only to George Soros. Are we about to see another Jeffrey Epstein situation?

Watch the video below to catch the conversation or find full episodes of "The News & Why It Matters" episodes here. Can't watch? Download the podcast here.


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Wall Street Journal gets torched over softball op-ed claiming FTX went bankrupt because supporters lost faith in its founder



A bizarre opinion article in the Wall Street Journal was torched by people online because the writer claimed that the cryptocurrency company FTX collapsed because supporters lost faith in its founder.

The article tried to tie together the fortunes of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried and those of former President Donald Trump, but along the way, Allysia Finley claimed that lack of support is why FTX failed.

"Mr. Bankman-Fried may not believe in anything greater than himself any more than the former president does," Finley wrote, referring to the disgraced founder's admission that he took advantage of ESG scores to dupe liberals into supporting him.

"FTX failed because Mr. Bankman-Fried’s supporters lost confidence in him. That may be how Mr. Trump finally crashes and burns too," Finley concluded.

Apart from the strained analogy to Trump's election fraud claims, Finley was excoriated online for her odd description of the downfall of FTX.

"Democrat's second biggest donor ran a DNC money laundering operation, shared a stage with Bill Clinton, hobnobbed with everyone in the Dem Party and had a line entitled 'Trumplose' on FTX balance sheet. And WSJ wants you believe he's Trump's twin. The dumbf***ery is off the hook," read one popular response.

"What the actual F@%K is this, who is paying for these articles to make SBF look like the victim?" replied another critic.

"It's unbelievable! How can anyone not see it how @SBF_FTX is protected by some hidden forces? 'He failed because his supporters lost confidence in him.' Yes they lost confidence because he defrauded them with creating a ponzi. Did Maddof fail because of his supporters?" read another critical tweet.

"Mainstream media will continue down its path of irrelevancy when it presents information through their own political lens. SBF have a backdoor in his accounting system to steal money and he gave a lot of money to political benefactors. How is that not the headline?" responded another critic.

Bankman-Fried is under "supervision" in the Bahamas as the investigation into the collapse continues. The cryptocurrency exchange company was valued at about $32 billion before filing for bankruptcy.

Here's more about the fall of FTX:

The FTX Collapse, Explained | What Went Wrong | WSJwww.youtube.com