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Ryan Salame
Ryan Salame
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Key Information

Ryan Salame (born 1993 (1993))[3] is an American entrepreneur who operated an illegal money-transmitting business. He was the CEO of FTX Digital Markets, the FTX subsidiary based in the Bahamas. He was the founder of the American Dream Federal Action super PAC.[4]

Early life and education

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Salame grew up in Sandisfield, Massachusetts.[5] He attended high school at Monument Mountain Regional High School in Great Barrington.[6] He earned Bachelor of Business Administration in accounting from Isenberg School of Management[7] and also Bachelor of Arts in economics from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2015. He later received a master's in finance from McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University in 2019.[8][4]

Career

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Salame worked briefly for Ernst & Young.[4] In 2019, he started working for Alameda Research in Hong Kong.[4] He later became co-chief of FTX Digital Markets, FTX's Bahamas unit.[9]

During the primaries of the 2022 United States elections, Salame donated millions of dollars to Republican candidates.[10]

Salame invested over $6 million in Lenox, Massachusetts restaurants and real estate.[11]

During the 2022 bankruptcy proceedings of FTX, it was revealed that the company loaned Salame $55 million.[5] Salame’s girlfriend Michelle Bond received $400,000 in consulting fees from FTX Digital Markets.[12] Salame claimed to have learned about the impending collapse of FTX in the week before it filed for bankruptcy and to have vomited upon hearing the news.[13] In April 2023 the FBI raided Salame’s Potomac, Maryland home.[14]

In September 2023, he pleaded guilty to violating campaign finance laws and operating an illegal money-transmitting business. He agreed to forfeit two properties in Lenox, MA and a Porsche automobile, and pay a $6 million fine and more than $5 million in restitution to FTX.[15][9] Despite prosecutors recommending a term of 5-7 years, in May 2024 Salame was sentenced to 7.5 years in federal prison.[16]

As of October 2024, he is incarcerated at FCI Cumberland in Maryland.[17] Before his incarceration, Salame gave an interview on Tucker Carlson's YouTube channel, claiming innocence. Carlson supported him.

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ryan Salame (born c. 1993) is an American entrepreneur and who served as co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, the Bahamian subsidiary of the , and as a high-ranking director at its affiliated trading firm from 2020 to . In this role, he oversaw operations that contributed to FTX's rapid expansion in international markets before the platform's collapse amid revelations of commingled customer funds and internal mismanagement. Salame gained prominence for orchestrating over $100 million in unlawful political contributions, often using proxies and unreported funds from and Alameda to support Republican candidates and causes, with the aim of shaping favorable regulations. He conspired with founder to bypass federal election laws, including schemes that violated contribution limits and disclosure requirements. Additionally, Salame admitted to operating an unlicensed money-transmitting business through Alameda on behalf of customers, facilitating billions in transactions without proper . In September 2023, Salame pleaded guilty to to commit wire via unlawful political donations and to defraud the , as well as to operating an unlicensed money service business; he was sentenced in May 2024 to 90 months in , followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered to forfeit $6.9 million in illicit gains. Unlike Bankman-Fried, who was convicted at trial for broader involving customer deposits, Salame's charges centered on political influence peddling and regulatory evasion rather than direct customer asset misappropriation, and he cooperated with authorities by providing evidence against others. Prior to , Salame worked in trading at firms like and held degrees in economics and accounting.

Personal background

Early life and education

Ryan Salame was born in 1993 in the United States and grew up in Sandisfield, , a rural town on the edge of Berkshire County. He attended high school in nearby Great Barrington, where he developed an early interest in , including . Salame pursued undergraduate studies at the Amherst's Isenberg School of Management, earning a in and a in over four years. He met the requirements for certification as a (CPA) in during this period. In 2019, he completed a in at .

Professional career

Early roles in finance and cryptocurrency

Salame earned a in and a in accounting from the around 2014, fulfilling the 150-credit requirement for licensure in . Following graduation, he worked as a tax accountant, gaining initial experience in financial compliance and reporting. Aiming for roles in or , Salame pursued an online in Finance from , completing the degree in 2019. During this period, he cultivated an interest in amid its nascent development, drawing from online forums and early market participation. In late 2019, shortly after graduating, Salame joined , a quantitative trading firm, in as head of over-the-counter (OTC) operations for the region. In this role, he oversaw OTC trading activities, which involved direct, high-volume transactions outside public exchanges, contributing to the firm's market-making and liquidity provision strategies from 2019 to 2021.

Leadership at FTX Digital Markets

Ryan Salame was appointed CEO of FTX Digital Markets, FTX's Bahamian subsidiary, on September 20, 2021, as part of the parent company's strategic relocation of its headquarters from to to capitalize on the jurisdiction's emerging regulatory framework for digital assets. Prior to this, Salame had served as head of over-the-counter trading at , FTX's affiliated , providing him with experience in high-volume transactions. In his new role, he oversaw day-to-day operations of the Bahamas-regulated exchange, focusing on compliance with local securities laws and expansion of trading services for international users excluded from U.S.-centric platforms. By October 2021, Salame transitioned to co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, sharing leadership duties while maintaining primary responsibility for regulatory engagement and operational scaling in the offshore environment. His efforts emphasized building relationships with Bahamian authorities, including positioning FTX Digital Markets as the first digital asset exchange to secure a license from the Securities Commission of the Bahamas, which streamlined approvals for derivatives and spot trading activities. This licensing milestone, achieved amid a cryptocurrency market bull run with Bitcoin prices surging from approximately $29,000 in July 2021 to over $69,000 by November, enabled the subsidiary to onboard institutional and retail traders seeking regulated access to leveraged products outside stringent U.S. oversight. Under Salame's tenure, Digital Markets expanded its workforce by relocating about 50 employees to , supporting initiatives to increase trading volumes in non-U.S. markets through enhanced provision and product offerings like contracts. These operational advancements aligned with broader industry tailwinds, including heightened global demand for crypto during the 2021-2022 period, where 's overall platform volumes reportedly exceeded $10 billion daily at peaks—attributable in part to the entity's role in handling international flows unencumbered by domestic restrictions. Salame's focus on jurisdictional compliance also involved proactive coordination with local regulators to adapt to evolving policies, fostering a hub for offshore exchange activities.

Political activities

Campaign contributions and donor schemes

Ryan Salame, co-CEO of Digital Markets, directed political contributions exceeding $100 million from fall 2021 through the 2022 midterm elections, funded by and but routed through straw donors—including himself and executives like Nishad Singh—to evade federal limits on individual and corporate donations. These schemes involved over 300 transactions totaling tens of millions of dollars, with reimbursements made to donors using company resources to conceal the true sources. Donations targeted recipients across both parties, but Salame's efforts emphasized Republican causes through dark money channels, including PACs and state-level groups, while overt contributions skewed toward GOP committees. For example, on September 8, 2022, he donated $10,000 to the New York Republican Federal Campaign Committee. In November 2022, days before FTX's bankruptcy, Salame wired $500,000 to the . FEC filings from the 2022 cycle document additional Salame contributions, such as $5,000 to the Bluegrass Committee (R) on October 18, 2022, reflecting a pattern of support for Republican-aligned entities. Salame later described himself as potentially the second- or third-largest GOP donor in that cycle via these mechanisms.

Efforts to influence regulation

Salame, as co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, the Bahamian arm of the exchange, collaborated with industry advocates to promote regulatory frameworks that accommodated offshore cryptocurrency operations with reduced U.S. oversight, arguing such policies would foster innovation by allowing firms to operate beyond stringent domestic rules. This positioning aligned with FTX's structure, which relied on lighter-touch Bahamian regulations to serve international clients while avoiding full U.S. compliance burdens. Through partnerships, including with his associate Michelle Bond, who served as CEO of the Association for Digital Asset Markets and focused on legislative advocacy in Washington, Salame engaged in efforts to influence policymakers toward crypto-friendly rules, such as opposing overly prescriptive measures from agencies like FinCEN. Bond's group lobbied for balanced infrastructure legislation that supported growth without stifling it, including pushes against reporting expansions seen as burdensome. Together, they met with lawmakers to advance these positions, gaining access to Republican figures receptive to industry arguments for regulatory clarity over heavy intervention. Salame also backed political action committees like GMI PAC, contributing $1.5 million in 2021 to support candidates and initiatives advocating for U.S.-centric legislation that encouraged domestic innovation rather than driving it overseas. GMI PAC expended over $10 million in midterm primaries to elect pro-crypto lawmakers, contributing to bipartisan momentum for measures like the stalled infrastructure bill provisions favoring digital assets. While these efforts secured hearings and discussions on lighter regulations, critics from regulatory bodies and traditional finance contended they prioritized industry profits over consumer protections, potentially delaying robust oversight amid rising fraud risks. Proponents, however, credited such advocacy with preventing outright bans and promoting innovation-friendly policies, as evidenced by continued congressional debates post-FTX.

Involvement in FTX collapse

As co-CEO of Digital Markets Ltd. (FTX DM), the Bahamian subsidiary of the exchange appointed in October 2021, Ryan Salame oversaw operational functions including fiat settlements, customer deposit processing, and fund transfers routed through Ltd. accounts. FTX DM handled approximately $5.4 billion in customer deposits, which were transmitted without U.S. money transmission licensing by leveraging entities like the North Dimension account—initially misrepresented as a trading vehicle—to manage inflows and outflows on behalf of customers. These practices supported 's reported $15 billion daily trading volume by early 2022, but relied on unregulated channels for cross-border movements. Bankruptcy examiner findings detailed how FTX Group entities, including FTX DM, commingled customer funds with Alameda assets from 2019 onward, forgoing meaningful segregation and enabling the diversion of about $8.7 billion in client deposits—primarily cash and stablecoins—to Alameda's operations. Under Salame's settlements oversight, these flows facilitated Alameda's receipt of FTX customer deposits, which were then allocated to non-exchange purposes such as Bahamian acquisitions totaling over $243 million via FTX DM-linked accounts. Salame has stated he lacked knowledge of such misuses, attributing operational distinctions to the jurisdictional separation of Bahamian-regulated FTX DM from U.S.-facing platforms. This integrated funding model causally underpinned the November 2022 collapse, as Alameda's inability to liquidate positions amid market stress exposed shortfalls, rendering FTX unable to meet over $10 billion in redemption demands tied to the affiliate's deficits. Investigations, including SEC and CFTC analyses, confirmed the absence of firewalls between and proprietary funds as a core vulnerability, amplifying liquidity risks during withdrawal runs rather than isolated errors. Prior to the filing, Salame notified Bahamian regulators of potential asset mishandling by leadership, highlighting internal awareness gaps in the segregated entity structure.

Criminal charges and guilty plea

On November 11, 2022, following the Trading Ltd., federal authorities in the Southern District of New York initiated investigations into Ryan Salame's use of corporate funds for political purposes. Salame, who served as co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets Ltd., faced scrutiny for directing contributions that prosecutors alleged violated federal election laws by masking their corporate origins. On September 7, 2023, Salame entered a guilty before U.S. District Judge to two felony counts: conspiracy to make unlawful campaign contributions and to defraud the (FEC), and conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting business. According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), Salame admitted to conspiring from autumn 2021 through November 2022 to funnel over $100 million in contributions—exceeding individual and corporate limits—through straw donors, including FTX and employees whose identities and funding sources were concealed to evade FEC reporting requirements. These donations, prosecutors stated, involved reimbursing participants for over 300 political transfers to curry regulatory favor, with Salame agreeing to forfeit approximately $1.5 billion in proceeds as part of the . The unlicensed money transmission charge stemmed from Salame's oversight of FTX's U.S. operations, where billions in customer deposits were allegedly routed without proper state licenses, facilitating the donation scheme. DOJ evidence highlighted wire transfers from Alameda accounts to political action committees and candidates, disguised as personal funds. Salame's plea included cooperation provisions, providing prosecutors with documents on the scheme's mechanics. Salame has contested the prosecution's approach as selectively aggressive, asserting in a October 2024 interview that it targeted his Republican-aligned donations—totaling tens of millions to pro-crypto GOP causes—while overlooking analogous Democrat-linked activities by founder , whose contributions exceeded $40 million without parallel charges. He described the plea as influenced by prosecutorial leverage, including threats to related parties, framing it as part of broader regulatory animus toward ventures favoring conservative policies. These claims remain unadjudicated, with DOJ maintaining the charges rested on empirical violations independent of recipients' affiliations.

Sentencing and imprisonment

On May 28, 2024, United States District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan sentenced Ryan Salame to 90 months (seven and a half years) in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered forfeiture of over $6 million related to his illegal political contributions and wire fraud conspiracy. The sentence exceeded the U.S. Department of Justice's recommendation of 5 to 7 years, reflecting the judge's assessment of Salame's limited cooperation with authorities compared to other FTX executives, despite his guilty plea. Salame's initial self-surrender date of August 29, 2024, was delayed to October after he sustained injuries from a attack requiring urgent medical treatment and surgery, as approved by Judge Kaplan. He reported to the medium-security Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) Cumberland in on October 11, 2024, to begin serving his term. Federal Bureau of Prisons records indicate Salame's projected release date as March 1, 2031, reflecting standard good-time credits that reduced his effective incarceration period by more than one year from the original calculation. Critics, including Better Markets, have argued that even the imposed sentence undervalues the broader harms from FTX's collapse—such as billions in customer losses—while noting Salame's refusal to fully assist prosecutors, unlike cooperating co-defendants who received lighter terms.

Post-conviction matters

Civil litigation and asset recovery

In November 2024, the Recovery Trust initiated an adversary proceeding in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of against Ryan Salame, seeking to avoid and recover approximately $98.8 million in alleged fraudulent transfers from FTX Group entities to Salame between 2021 and 2022. The complaint asserts that Salame received these funds without providing reasonably equivalent value, with intent to defraud creditors, including through schemes involving of customer deposits and deceptive practices such as creating on exchanges. Of this amount, roughly $4 million was used to purchase a residential property in the Avenel community of , in 2022, which the Trust claims constitutes a direct application of fraudulently transferred assets for personal benefit. The Trust invoked Bankruptcy Code sections 544(b) and 548 to challenge the transfers as avoidable, arguing they rendered insolvent and prioritized Salame's personal enrichment over creditor claims. To enforce recovery, the Trust obtained a temporary and, on June 27, 2025, a preliminary from the court prohibiting Salame from dissipating or transferring the disputed assets, including and any proceeds. This mechanism aims to preserve the estate for distribution to FTX's creditors, who are estimated to recover over 100% of claims through ongoing bankruptcy proceedings, though clawbacks like this target insiders to ensure equitable treatment. Creditors, represented by the Trust, demand full restitution, viewing the transfers as emblematic of FTX insiders' systematic diversion of funds that exacerbated the exchange's collapse and losses exceeding $8 billion. Salame has not publicly detailed a substantive defense to the fraudulent transfer claims in court filings available as of October 2025, though related proceedings indicate disputes over asset handling, with the court declining to hold him in contempt for most alleged temporary violations. His prior assertions of innocence in criminal matters and claims of prosecutorial suggest a potential argument that the transfers represented legitimate compensation or operational payments rather than fraudulent conveyances, though such positions remain unadjudicated in the civil context.

Public commentary and rehabilitation claims

Following his guilty plea on September 7, 2023, and sentencing to 90 months in prison on May 28, 2024, Ryan Salame has issued public statements primarily through and interviews, contesting aspects of the legal proceedings against FTX executives. On X (formerly ), under the handle @rsalame7926, Salame has posted daily since his sentencing, including assertions that remained solvent at the time of its collapse and criticisms of witness testimony in Sam Bankman-Fried's trial, alleging that key witnesses such as provided false statements under pressure from prosecutors. In a pre-incarceration interview with published on October 21, 2024, Salame reiterated claims of an unfair trial, stating that cooperating defendants were incentivized to lie and that his own plea was coerced due to prosecutorial misrepresentations regarding investigations into his associate Michelle Bond. Salame has attributed harsher treatment in his case to political motivations, alleging bias by the Department of Justice against Republican donors. In a discussion on The Show aired in late 2024, he described his prosecution as linked to his donations totaling $20–30 million to Republican candidates and causes during the cycle, contrasting this with perceived leniency toward executives aligned with Democratic interests. These claims align with his broader narrative of systemic favoritism in federal handling of FTX-related cases, though Salame provided no of partisan directives in DOJ communications beyond his personal account. Prior to self-surrendering to FCI Cumberland on October 11, 2024, Salame updated his profile to list his new role as "Inmate at FCI Cumberland," accompanied by a post framed in ironic enthusiasm: "I'm happy to share that I'm starting a new position." This followed lighter-hearted entries reflecting on pitfalls, such as over-reliance on centralized platforms without sufficient risk disclosures. Sentencing disparities among FTX executives provide empirical context for Salame's contentions: Bankman-Fried received 25 years after conviction at trial; Ellison, who cooperated and testified, was sentenced to 2 years on September 24, 2024; co-founder Gary Wang, also a cooperator, received no time beyond on November 20, 2024; and Nishad Singh avoided incarceration entirely after pleading guilty and assisting prosecutors. Salame's longer term followed his refusal to testify against Bankman-Fried or fully cooperate, a factor prosecutors highlighted as diminishing mitigation arguments.

Personal life

Relationship with Michelle Bond

Ryan Salame entered into a romantic partnership with Michelle Bond, a policy advocate and former head of the Association for Digital Asset Markets, around 2022 after being introduced through connections at . The pair quickly emerged as a prominent "power couple" within 's lobbying community, where they socialized and collaborated informally at industry networking events and policy discussions from late 2021 through 2022. Bond and Salame accompanied each other publicly during Bond's 2022 congressional campaign in New York's 1st district, where Salame's presence on the campaign trail underscored their aligned interests in promoting favorable regulations. The couple welcomed a son in December 2023, further intertwining their personal lives amid Salame's professional entanglements. In Salame's federal sentencing on May 28, 2024, where he received a 90-month term, defense arguments highlighted mitigating factors, including his role as to the infant and ongoing partnership with Bond, though the court weighed these against the severity of his offenses. Salame later contended that aspects of his agreement implicitly accounted for protections related to his unit, a claim disputed by prosecutors.

References

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