Sam Bankman-Fried’s late night visit from glamorous crypto influencer revealed

A glamorous crypto influencer who previously got Sam Bankman-Fried to open up about his polyamorous sex life became one of the first people to visit the disgraced FTX CEO on house arrest.   

Tiffany Fong, who interviewed Bankman-Fried twice after FTX filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late November, said the disgraced CEO was ‘surprisingly optimistic’ when they spoke.  

Since December 23, Bankman-Fried has been under house arrest at his parents’ $4 million home in Palo Alto, California, after he was freed in a Manhattan court on a $250 million bond. The former CEO, 30, is facing securities and wire fraud charges related to his collapsed crypto exchange FTX. 

On Wednesday, Fong, 26, tweeted: ‘I met with Sam Bankman-Fried last night. I haven’t written anything thoughtful out about our conversation – I’m just sharing because I’m getting some questions about this. I’m still in holiday mode & am visiting family in SF atm, so please be patient.’

Fong spoke to DailyMail.com about how the meeting came about, Bankman-Fried’s frustrations with prison life and his optimism for the future despite facing 115 years in prison if convicted.  

On Tuesday night, independent crypto journalist Tiffany Fong said that she visited Sam Bankman-Fried at his parents’ home in Palo Alto

Fong said that she’d informed Bankman-Fried she’d be in San Francisco for the holidays to visit family and asked if he was allowed visitors. He affirmed, so they met Tuesday evening.  

It was reported Wednesday that Bankman-Fried is expected to enter a plea next week in response to criminal charges, which allege he defrauded investors and looted billions of dollars in customer funds at his failed cryptocurrency exchange. 

Fong said that Bankman-Fried is ‘unsure’ if he will have to go to New York in person for the plea on January 3. 

If convicted on all charges, Bankman-Fried is facing 115 years in prison. 

Fong said: ‘He’s aware of the possibility of prison time, but it does not seem he wants to ruminate extensively on the worst case scenario: a lifetime in prison. I believe he feels that internally spiraling about the possibility would be an unproductive use of his time.’ 

Following his December 12 arrest in the Bahamas, Bankman-Fried was held in the notorious Fox Hill Prison, where inmates are reportedly crammed in cells with multiple other inmates, without access to running water or other means of basic hygiene.

Sam Bankman-Fried being escorted by Ghislaine Maxwell's former bodyguard Jimmy Harkins from court last week in New York after he was released on a $250million bond

Sam Bankman-Fried being escorted by Ghislaine Maxwell’s former bodyguard Jimmy Harkins from court last week in New York after he was released on a $250million bond

Fong said of his prison experience: ‘He obviously did not enjoy his time there. It overall seemed that he had more difficulty grappling with the lack of mental stimulation in Fox Hill than the physical conditions and environment.’ 

It was earlier reported that Bankman-Fried was held in the sickbay at the prison – dubbed ‘Fox Hell’ by fearful locals – where he reportedly received preferential treatment over other inmates.

The embattled crypto crook reportedly had access to his own toilet, running water, a TV, local newspapers, crossword puzzles and a host of other perks – including food that adheres to his vegan lifestyle.

Fong told the New York Post: ‘He definitely expressed regret and remorse a number of times. He’s trying to gather his take on events…. He sounded like he was trying to gather his thoughts about what happened.’

She also noted that while she’s sure his parents ‘are having a difficult time, he’s mentioned that they’ve been continually supportive.’ 

On December 18, Fong posted his picture at the White House's Christmas party, she wrote in the caption: 'I let POTUS smell my hair'

On December 18, Fong posted his picture at the White House’s Christmas party, she wrote in the caption: ‘I let POTUS smell my hair’

Fong said of her meeting with Bankman-Fried: 'He definitely expressed regret and remorse a number of times. He’s trying to gather his take on events…. He sounded like he was trying to gather his thoughts about what happened'

Fong said of her meeting with Bankman-Fried: ‘He definitely expressed regret and remorse a number of times. He’s trying to gather his take on events…. He sounded like he was trying to gather his thoughts about what happened’

In November, Bankman-Fried made some of the most explosive revelations surrounding FTX to Fong. 

When she asked how the company’s ended up being used by Alameda Research, he said: ‘It was a messy combination of things – a lot of things I should have caught and a lot of things I should have been way more cautious about.’

Bankman-Fried also told Fong that he didn’t know how to code and that he couldn’t have built a secret way to move money between his company and Alameda Research even if he wanted to.

Finally, the disgraced crypto trader told Fong that he donated to Republican politicians as well as Democrats. 

He said: ‘All my Republican donations were dark but the reason was not for regulatory reasons, it was that reporters freak the f*** out when you donate to Republicans and I didn’t want to deal with that.’

Bankman-Fried will be arraigned three days into the new year at 2pm on January 3 before US District Judge Lewis Kaplan in Manhattan federal court. 

Kaplan was given the case on Tuesday, after the original judge recused herself due to her husband’s law firm having advised FTX prior to its shocking collapse. 

Bankman-Fried stands accused of engaging in a years-long ‘fraud of epic proportions,’ that he executed primarily by using customer deposits to support his Alameda Research trading firm, as well as to buy real estate and make record-setting political contributions. 

Judge Kaplan is best known to have been the judge who is overseeing two civil lawsuits brought against former President Donald Trump by writer E. Jean Carroll claiming she was defamed when Trump denied raping her in Bergdorf Goodman nearly 30 years ago.

Kaplan, who has a reputation for being a no-nonsense jurist, also oversaw the case brought by Prince Andrew accuser Virginia Giuffre, who alleged the royal sexually abused her when she was 17 at the London residence of Ghislaine Maxwell.

Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried has brought on board top private investigator Jimmy Harkins, who formerly worked for Ghislaine Maxwell, among other high-profile individuals.

Harkins was seen escorting Bankman-Fried from court last week. The failed crypto-boss has also hired Christian Everdell, one of Maxwell’s attorneys.

Prior to his December 12 arrest in the Bahamas, SBF acknowledged risk-management failures at FTX, but maintained that he does not believe he is criminally liable.

Two of his chief associates, former Alameda CEO Caroline Ellison and former FTX chief technology officer Gary Wang, have entered guilty pleas over their roles in FTX’s collapse and have agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk