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Semafor, a digital news site launched last year, agreed to return the alleged dirty money it took from accused crypto conman Sam Bankman-Fried, according to a report.

“The company intends to redeem the investment,” said an anonymous source, who avoided using the word “return,” but declined to specify the difference between redeeming and simply returning the investment, the Wrap reported Tuesday.

The site founded by former Bloomberg Media CEO Justin Smith and former New York Times media columnist Ben Smith did not disclose the amount of Bankman-Fried’s investment in the company’s $25 million seed round in June.

Bankman-Fried, who pleaded not guilty at his arraignment in Manhattan court Tuesday, awaits trial over the collapse of the FTX crypto exchange, which he founded. The 30-year-old is accused of fraud and mismanagement of billions of dollars that creditors are scrambling to claw back after FTX filed for bankruptcy. He was released on a $250 million bond package on Dec. 22.

“We are actively working with the relevant legal and governmental bodies who are managing this situation and are following their guidance on the most appropriate next steps to ensure the most ethical and responsible outcome for Sam Bankman-Fried’s creditors and the judicial process underway,” a Semafor rep told the Wrap.


  Justin Smith (left) and Ben Smith (right) founded Semafor, which took an investment from Sam Bankman-Fried prior to launching in October. AP Justin Smith (left) and Ben Smith (right) founded Semafor, which took an investment from Sam Bankman-Fried prior to launching in October. AP

A source told the Wrap that giving back Bankman-Fried’s investment posed difficulties, because the money “could not ethically be returned to Bankman-Fried himself.” For that reason, the insider said, Semafor has been “waiting for guidance from government prosecutors about the best way to respond.” 

A rep for Semafor did not return The Post’s requests for comment.

Bankman-Fried both personally and through a family foundation, gave millions of dollars to media companies — including Semafor, ProPublica, Vox Media, the Intercept, and the Law and Justice Project — before FTX declared bankruptcy in November.


  Sam Bankman-Fried leaves federal court in Manhattan on Jan. 3, 2023. REUTERS Sam Bankman-Fried leaves federal court in Manhattan on Jan. 3, 2023. REUTERS

ProPublica, the investigative nonprofit media firm, said in late December it would return a $5 million donation, adding that it “will return the initial $1.6 million it received in what was supposed to be a three-year, $5 million grant, and that it has terminated its relationship with the Building a Stronger Future foundation following allegations of fraudulent activities against Sam Bankman-Fried.”

Before Bankman-Fried’s arrest, Semafor had been less clear about whether it would return the accused crypto fraudster’s money, telling blogger Mickey Klaus that it is “monitoring the evolving situation closely.”

In his blog post titled “Send it Back Ben,” Klaus wrote: “That’s nice, but actually, I wasn’t worried that Semafor wouldn’t be able to hold on to its Bankman bucks. The question more is: Will Semafor give the money back?”


  Semafor is reportedly returning its investment from Sam Bankman-Fried. Semafor Semafor is reportedly returning its investment from Sam Bankman-Fried. Semafor

He continued that “legally” the issue is murky, but that “morally,” it seems “open and shut.”

“Maybe Bankman-Fried wasn’t a felon…..but the stench of sleaze and scamming is unmistakable and familiar,” he wrote.

Justin Smith tweeted out a company memo on Dec. 2 laying out some details of Bankman-Fried’s investment. He said the crypto fraudster invested in Semafor’s pre-seed round in May 2022, which raised a total of $25 million to launch the company in October.

Smith said Bankman-Fried’s investment had not yet converted to equity, and that he was awaiting “guidance” from the government agencies investigating the crypto founder before deciding what to do. 

“While we continue to monitor the legal situation closely, the best thing we can do is to continue to report on this story with the relentless tenacity that audiences are coming to expect from us,” Smith wrote. 

Other investors in Semafor included former Atlantic magazine owner David Bradley, the Information CEO Jessica Lessin, investor John Thornton and Jorge Paolo Lemann, co-founder of 3G Capital.

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