
During the 2023 trial, Ellison delivered damning testimony, describing lies, reckless borrowing, and the secret misuse of FTX client funds.
Caroline Ellison, the former chief executive of Alameda Research and a central figure in the fall of Sam Bankman-Fried’s crypto empire, has been quietly transferred from a federal prison facility after serving about 11 months of a two-year sentence.
The 31-year-old man was transferred Oct. 16 from the low-security Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Conn., to a community facility.
From star witness to home confinement
According to Business Insider, the latter status keeps her in federal custody but allows her to serve the remainder of her sentence either at home or in a halfway house. The U.S. Bureau of Prisons confirmed the transfer but declined to share details about his exact location or the conditions of his detention, citing privacy and security concerns.
Prison records reveal that Ellison is scheduled to be released on February 20, 2026, nearly nine months earlier than her original sentence, although officials have not said why.
Ellison reported to Danbury in early November 2024 after being sentenced for her role in the multibillion-dollar fraud that collapsed FTX and its sister trading company, Alameda Research. She pleaded guilty to conspiring with Bankman-Fried in what prosecutors described as an $11 billion scheme that involved secretly using FTX client funds to cover losses and risky bets on Alameda.
Ellison’s testimony at the 2023 trial offered some of the most surprising revelations. The former CEO of Alameda Research told jurors that Bankman-Fried directed her to lie to investors and borrow funds aggressively, leaving Alameda with about $10 billion in loans by mid-2022. Ellison also outlined the extreme measures discussed to recover frozen Chinese funds, including negotiations, the use of third-party crypto wallets, and an alleged $100 million bribe. It further revealed attempts to raise funds from Saudi Arabia, misuse of FTX client funds, and the creation of several falsified balance sheets to hide Alameda’s insolvency.
His cooperation played a major role in Bankman-Fried’s conviction, a fact acknowledged by U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan at his sentencing. While praising Ellison’s assistance as “substantial,” Kaplan said the scale and severity of the misconduct made prison time inevitable and rejected his attorneys’ request that no prison time be imposed.
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SBF’s prison delusions
Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried is serving a 25-year prison sentence after a jury found him guilty of all seven counts of fraud and conspiracy. He is currently being held in a low-security federal prison in San Pedro, California, and is appealing his conviction and the length of his sentence.
Unlike Ellison, who kept a low profile, Bankman-Fried continued to make public statements about the affair. In recent months, he has accused court-appointed FTX CEO John J. Ray III of intentionally keeping the exchange bankrupt despite what he described as a “perfectly solvent” company.
He has also circulated lengthy statements insisting that FTX never collapsed due to fraud, blaming lawyers, regulators and political forces for what he calls a poorly managed liquidity crisis. More recently, Bankman-Fried has suggested that his arrest was politically motivated, while noting his shift toward centrist views and his donations to Republican causes.
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