Federal indictment does not name FTX or Sam Bankman-Fried as the victimized company, but Bloomberg reports it was indeed them.

The United States federal government has on Wednesday issued charges against three individuals allegedly involved in a long-standing hacking scheme culminating in the infamous theft of $400 million from FTX, a #cryptocurrency exchange owned by Sam Bankman-Fried, which subsequently collapsed.

In an 18-page indictment filed in a federal court in Washington, prosecutors have accused Robert Powell, Carter Rohn, and Emily Hernandez of conspiring to commit wire fraud and identity theft in the operation of a SIM card swap ring targeting fifty victims from March 2021 to April 2023.

Their most significant heist took place on November 11, 2022, when the trio siphoned off $400 million from an unidentified company. Bloomberg, citing sources familiar with the matter, claims that the company in question was FTX.

Through AT&T networks, they gained access to the cryptocurrency exchange's employees and transferred cryptocurrencies worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

This indictment may finally provide an answer to one of the most significant questions surrounding the FTX scandal: Where did the hundreds of millions of dollars in cryptocurrencies disappear to during the darkest hour of the exchange, right after it filed for bankruptcy protection.

#crypto #fraud

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