The federal judge slated to oversee FTX founder Sam Bankman Fried’s case has recused herself because her husband’s law firm advised the bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange.
Ronnie Abrams, a district judge for the Southern District of Latest York, said in a court order on Friday that the law firm of Davis Polk and Wardwell LLP — where her husband is a partner — advised FTX in 2021.
The firm represented parties that could be adversarial to FTX and to Bankman-Fried in other proceedings or potential proceedings, Abrams wrote.
“My husband has had no involvement in any of those representations,” she wrote within the filing. “These matters are confidential and their substance is unknown to the Court. Nonetheless, to avoid and possible conflict, or the looks of 1, the Court hereby recuses itself from this motion.”
Abrams’ husband, Greg D. Andres, is former Brooklyn federal prosecutor who later served as a deputy assistant attorney general within the Justice Department, The Latest York Times reported earlier this month.
Andres was a part of special counsel Robert S. Mueller’s team that investigated Russian interference within the 2016 election.
Before she was appointed by President Barack Obama in 2012, Abrams also worked at Davis Polk & Wardwell where she oversaw its pro bono program, in response to The Times. From 1998 to 2008, she was a prosecutor with the US attorney’s office within the Southern District of Latest York.
Bankman-Fried, who’s currently under house arrest while out on a record-breaking $250 million bond, is accused of illegally using investors’ money to purchase real estate, fund his trading firm Alameda Research and make political donations that led to FTX’s sudden collapse last month.
He faces charges of wire fraud, securities fraud, conspiracy, money laundering and campaign finance violations that would put him behind bars for 115 years.