These 12 people will decide the fate of Sam Bankman-Fried

Jurors have been chosen — Sam Bankman-Fried’s fraud trial will come down to 12 jurors that range from early 30s to late 60s and retired investment banks to correction officers and non-profit workers.
Jurors have been chosen — Sam Bankman-Fried’s fraud trial will come down to 12 jurors that range from early 30s to late 60s and retired investment banks to correction officers and non-profit workers.

A pregnant physician’s assistant, a train conductor and a retired investment banker are reportedly among the 12 individuals who will eventually decide on the fate of former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried.

As per a report from Cointelegraph’s on-the-ground reporter Ana Paula Pereira, the 12 jurors were narrowed down from a list of 45 on Oct. 4, the second day of trial in Manhattan.

The potential jurors were each given a minute to introduce themselves by sharing their background, age, employment, education, relationship history and children.

Pereira noted that one prospective juror said his wife worked for a law firm that provided services to FTX in the past — though it isn’t clear whether he was selected.

One prospective juror was reportedly excused after revealing she worked for a firm that invested in FTX and Alameda Research, according to Matthew Russell Lee from Inner City Press.

District Court Judge Lewis A. Kaplan then discussed jury selection with the prosecutors and Bankman-Fried’s defense lawyers before revealing the final 12 jury members about 15 minutes later.

Scenes from outside New York’s Supreme Court — a short walk away from where Bankman-Fried’s fraud trial is being held. Source: Cointelegraph

As per Oct. 4 reports from Bloomberg and TechCrunch, the final list of jurors shows the panel will be female-dominated, comprising nine women and three men.

Their ages range from the early 30s to the late 60s, and their professions span various industries, including health, financial, legal, IT and education. Five of them are university-educated. The full list of jurors is below:

  • A man in his late 60s, who was an investment banker at a firm called Salomon Brothers. He completed his Master of Business Administration at Stanford University.
  • A man, age 59, didn’t say what he does for work but said his company is currently being sued. It is understood that the man has served as a jury member in the past.
  • A man, age 61, works for the United States Postal Service. He has no wife or children and has served as a jury member in the past.
  • A woman, age 39, currently works as a physician assistant and was once a medical missionary in the Dominican Republic. She’s 10 weeks pregnant and married to a web developer.
  • A middle-aged woman who once studied at Duke University and has experience working with nonprofits and managing fundraisers.
  • A woman, age 50, works as a train conductor. She’s a mother of five children. Two of the five children have reportedly been convicted of crimes.
  • A woman, age 65, is a retired corrections officer.
  • A woman, age 33, works as a nurse in Westchester, New York and reportedly studied at the State University of New York, Binghamton.
  • A woman, age 40, is currently unemployed as a social worker and previously studied at Princeton University and Columbia University.
  • A woman who works at a school in the Bronx, New York. She previously studied at the University of Buffalo and Syracuse University.
  • A woman who works in advertising. She has an 18-year-old daughter and a 12-year-old son.
  • A woman, age 55, who works as a special education teacher in Rockland, New York.

Related: Sam Bankman-Fried FTX trial — 5 things you need to know

After the jury members were selected, a 15-minute opening statement was delivered by the prosecutors and defense. Testimonies from Marc Julliard, a cocoa broker who lost about $80,000 to FTX, and Adam Yedidia, Bankman-Fried’s former close friend, were then heard before Judge Kaplan called it a day.

Bankman-Fried’s criminal trial is expected to take place over six weeks. He is facing seven fraud-related charges for his role as CEO in FTX’s shock collapse in November.

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