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Shkreli is a good example of how well oiled justice runs if the defendant is politically indefensible. In the same vein the treatment that SBF got so far (eg getting invited as speaker on a NYT event that featured people such as Selenskyy) makes me fear it will be a much softer prosecution.



A couple of days ago there was a consensus group of Republican commentators confidently asserting SBF’s Democratic donations and connections meant there would no investigation/prosecution at all. Perhaps now this have pivoted to saying they’ll go easy on him?

It seems to me, all these assertions say nothing about the process of justice for SBF, and instead only illustrate that the people making them can’t conceive that there is a section of the political class who believe the law should apply equally to rich people as well as poor people.


Didn't he and his close associates donate to the Republican party members as well?


SBF said so but there is no public evidence of it, so far as I can tell. The federal government brought a charge against SBF due to his campaign contributions, so it can perhaps be expected that we will learn more about those contributions as this saga plays out.


> But Ryan Salame, another executive, gave almost $24 million to Republican and conservative causes, somewhat counterbalancing the giving to the left. Overall, according to Open Secrets, FTX donations to candidates were very slightly GOP-leaning, although contributions to individual politicians were only a small slice of the $70 million.

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/12/sam-bankma...

As Jon Stewart pointed out, they went with the classic formula of having “a guy for each camp.”


Here is where semantics get tricky and people are twisting facts. Fox who reported on this positioned it as SBF donated 40 million to democrats and barely anything to republicans. Fox has in several articles used Open Secrets and the number the report match open secrets. But they left out a big part of the story. Most of the 40 million didn't go to "Democrats," they went to democrat aligned super pacs. Open secrets also shows that FTX/SBF put 20-25 million into republican aligned super pacts. I believe one of board members of FTX, Ryan Salame, also donated about 15 million or 20 million to "Republican causes?" For me, I will just say we should probably lump all of these donations under a single entity.

The reality is. These guys were funneling tons of money into anyone who would take it. What is hard to extrapolate is, were democrats easier to buy on mass and that is why there is a higher amount? Or were republican votes cheaper?

[1] https://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/ftx-us/summary?id=D00007369... [2] https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2022/12/09/crypto-sca...


I don't think we'll ever see another defendant in these kinds of cases as universally hated by the public as Martin Shkreli. The transcripts from his jury selection made the news[0]. Some highlights:

"he disrespected the Wu-Tang Clan" (big problem in NYC, of course)

"he kind of looks like a dick"

"I would honestly, like, seriously like to go over there -"

[0] - https://www.spin.com/2017/08/martin-shkreli-jury-selection-t...


NYT is not the government. It's a private business that looks at profit first, politics second, and impartial justice last if at all. The financial lure of a panel with SBF post-scandal must have been too much to resist. It's not even clear the panel (did it happen in the end? I'm not sure) would do SBF any good, given his tendency to self-incriminate. On the other hand I'm sure it was incredible for NYT ratings.


Elizabeth Holmes?




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