FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried agrees to extradition to the US

When the Bahamas Attorney General’s office announced that it had arrested former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, it noted that the former FTX CEO was likely to be extradited at the request of the United States. Just over a week later, that prediction has come true: Bankman-Fried signed extradition papers on Tuesday afternoon.

According to an unsealed indictment, Bankman-Fried is facing 8 counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, commodities fraud, securities fraud, and more. Specifically, the SEC accuses the cryptocurrency founder of “orchestrating a massive, years-long fraud” for “his own personal benefit and to help grow his crypto empire.” The Department of Justice has accused him of attempting commodities and securities fraud, conspiring to defraud investors and breaking federal election laws for donating more to political groups than is legally allowed.

Bankman-Fried originally planned to fight extradition, but indicated on Monday that he would reverse course. Now, he will be returning to the US to face those charges, a decision that might be easier on him in the short term. When the former CEO was first arrested in the Bahamas, he was denied bail and deemed a flight risk. In the United States, it’s possible he could be released on bail.

Bankman-Fried has previously said that he “didn’t ever try to commit fraud,” and doesn’t believe he’s criminally liable for the fall of FTX. The New York Times reports that a defense lawyer representing Bankman-Fried in the Bahamas says that he’s returning to the US because he “wishes to put the customers right, and that is what has driven his decision.”

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The EU is investigating Broadcom's $61 billion deal to buy VMware

The European Union plans to carry out a full-scale investigation of Broadcom’s $61 billion bid to buy VMware. Following a preliminary probe, the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch, announced on Tuesday it believes the proposed acquisition may allow Broadcom to “restrict competition” in the markets for network interface cards, fiber channel host-bus adapters and storage adapters.

Specifically, the EU is concerned Broadcom may harm competition in those markets by limiting interoperability between rival hardware and VMware’s server virtualization software. It also worries the company could either prevent or degrade access to VMware’s software. The European Commission warns those actions “could lead to higher prices, lower quality and less innovation for business customers, and ultimately consumers.”

The Commission will also investigate whether Broadcom could hinder rivals like NVIDIA and Intel from developing their own smart network interface cards. Here it points to VMWare’s involvement in Project Monterey, an industry-wide effort the company announced in 2020. “Broadcom may decrease VMware’s involvement in Project Monterey to protect its own NICs revenues,” the Commission notes. “This could hamper innovation to the detriment of customers.” Another concern is that Broadcom could start bundling VMware’s virtualization software with its own mainframe and security tools, a move that would reduce choice in the market.

As one of the larger tech acquisitions of 2022, Broadcom’s bid to buy VMware was certain to draw scrutiny. The European Commission won’t necessarily block the deal, but the investigation could significantly delay the transaction and force concessions out of Broadcom. With today’s announcement, the Commission has 90 working days or until May 11th, 2023, to make a decision. If the deal were to fall through, it would be a bitter repeat of Broadcom’s 2018 attempt to buy chipmaker Qualcomm. While the circumstances and concerns were different, the company was forced to abandon the takeover after the Trump administration blocked the transaction.

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