Disgraced crypto founder Sam Bankman-Fried will be prohibited from accessing or transferring funds from his former crypto exchange FTX and its sister trading firm Alameda Research, a judge ordered at his arraignment hearing today in Manhattan. 

The decision comes days after blockchain researchers found that someone was transferring funds from crypto wallets associated with his trading firm, Alameda Research, that had been previously been associated with the crypto founder. 

Bankman-Fried tweeted on Dec. 30 that he was not behind the transfers, but Bloomberg reported the same day that federal prosecutors were looking into the transactions. 

At his arraignment hearing on Jan. 3, Bankman-Fried plead not guilty to eight counts. Assistant U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon asked that Bankman-Frieds bail conditions be changed so that he could no longer access or transfer funds belonging to his former companies, specifically referencing reports of last weeks transactions. 

Sassoon acknowledged that the government did not yet have evidence that the transfers were tied to Bankman-Fried, but said the court should not put full stock in his denials, given that he has previously tweeted false information. 

She added that the government could no longer access the funds that had been moved and that there was concern the same could happen to further assets, adding that Bankman-Fried had previously worked with Bahamian regulators after FTXs bankruptcy to transfer customer funds because he thought foreign regulators may be more lenient than the U.S. government. 

Bankman-Fried appeared to exchange notes with one of his lawyers, Mark Cohen, who spoke on behalf of his client to deny the allegations. Cohen said that Bankman-Frieds legal team had been in contact with the government to help figure out the source of the transactions, but that Bankman-Fried no longer had access to the wallets. 

Cohen said that Bankman-Frieds legal team has been in touch with prosecutors to work on language to change the bail conditions and asked Judge Lewis Kaplan for time to finalize the language. Kaplan demurred, ruling that the updated bail condition was warranted. 

Bankman-Frieds trial is scheduled for Oct. 2. 

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