Caroline Ellison is to be released of federal custody today after serving approximately 14 months of her two-year prison sentence.The 31-year-old’s early release comes after her extensive cooperation with federal prosecutors helped convict her former boss and ex-boyfriend, Sam Bankman-Fried, who is currently serving a 25-year sentence for orchestrating the $8 billion FTX cryptocurrency fraud.
Ellison began serving her sentence on November 7, 2024, at the Federal Correctional Institution in Danbury, Connecticut. However, her time behind bars was cut short due to good behavior credits and cooperation with authorities.
In October 2025, prison officials transferred her to a Residential Reentry Management facility in New York City. These halfway houses help inmates transition back into society by providing job placement assistance, financial management support, and other reintegration services.
Under federal law, inmates can earn up to 54 days per year off their sentence for good conduct. The First Step Act of 2018 also allows prisoners to reduce their sentences by participating in educational and work programs. Ellison’s transfer to community confinement and accelerated release date reflect these earned credits.
The Federal Bureau of Prisons initially projected her release for February 20, 2026, but updated records in late December 2025 moved the date forward by approximately four weeks.
Ellison’s lighter sentence stems directly from her decision to cooperate with federal investigators. She met with prosecutors approximately 20 times and served as the star witness during Bankman-Fried’s trial in November 2023.
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan, who sentenced Ellison in September 2024, praised her cooperation extensively. “I’ve seen a lot of cooperators in 30 years here, I’ve never seen one quite like Miss Ellison,” he stated during the sentencing hearing.
Her testimony provided crucial evidence about how Alameda Research and FTX illegally diverted customer funds. She testified for nearly three days, detailing how she altered balance sheets in June 2022 to hide that Alameda had borrowed approximately $10 billion from FTX customers.
Prosecutors acknowledged that her cooperation was “critical” to securing Bankman-Fried’s conviction on all seven fraud charges. She provided investigators with seven fake spreadsheets that became key evidence in the case.
Despite praising her cooperation, Judge Kaplan emphasized that the massive scale of the fraud required prison time. He called FTX potentially “the greatest financial fraud ever perpetrated in the history of this country” and said he couldn’t issue a “literal get-out-of-jail-free card.”
While Ellison’s prison sentence has ended, her punishment continues through significant restrictions on her future career. On December 19, 2025, she agreed to a 10-year ban from serving as an officer or director of any public company or cryptocurrency exchange.
The Securities and Exchange Commission settlement permanently prohibits her from holding leadership positions in regulated financial businesses until at least 2035. She also faces permanent injunctions against future securities violations and five-year conduct-based restrictions on her involvement in securities markets.
Additionally, Ellison must complete three years of supervised release, during which she’ll face regular reporting requirements, employment limitations, and ongoing federal monitoring. The $11 billion forfeiture order issued at her sentencing also remains in effect.
The sentences handed down to various FTX executives reveal stark differences based on their level of cooperation. Bankman-Fried, who maintained his innocence and didn’t cooperate, received 25 years in prison. According to Bureau of Prisons records, he won’t be eligible for release until September 2044.
Meanwhile, Gary Wang and Nishad Singh, who both cooperated extensively with prosecutors, avoided prison entirely. Wang, FTX’s former chief technology officer, and Singh, the former engineering director, each received sentences of time served with three years of supervised release. Both agreed to eight-year bans from serving as officers or directors of public companies.
Ryan Salame, who didn’t cooperate to the same extent as the others, received a 7.5-year sentence. However, his release date was recently reduced by one year due to good conduct credits.
FTX’s implosion in November 2022 sent shockwaves through the cryptocurrency industry. The exchange, which had been valued at $32 billion and was the world’s third-largest crypto platform, collapsed within days after revelations about its financial instability.
Ellison admitted to her role in diverting approximately $8 billion in customer funds from FTX to Alameda Research. The money was used for trading operations, venture investments, loan repayments, and personal expenses.
At her sentencing, Ellison expressed deep remorse. “Not a day goes by when I don’t think about all the people I hurt,” she said in an emotional statement. “On some level my brain can’t even truly comprehend the scale of the harm that I caused.”
John J. Ray III, who oversees FTX’s bankruptcy proceedings, stated that Ellison’s cooperation helped recover hundreds of millions of dollars in assets for creditors.
Ellison’s journey from Stanford graduate to federal inmate illustrates the dramatic rise and fall of the cryptocurrency industry’s most prominent figures. She joined Alameda Research as a trader and eventually became its sole CEO, overseeing high-risk trading strategies with billions of dollars in customer money.
Her romantic relationship with Bankman-Fried, which began in 2017 and continued intermittently until FTX’s collapse, came under intense scrutiny during the investigation. Defense attorneys argued she was “vulnerable and exploited” in this relationship, though prosecutors and the judge emphasized she bore full responsibility for her criminal actions.
During her time on bail before reporting to prison, Ellison engaged in charity work, wrote a novel, and worked with her parents on a math textbook. However, she also faced intense public harassment and struggled to find employment.
Her case has sparked ongoing debate about whether cooperation should result in such dramatically reduced sentences for executives involved in massive fraud. Critics argue that the lenient treatment undermines public trust in the justice system, while supporters contend that cooperation incentives are essential for prosecuting complex financial crimes.
Today marks the end of Ellison’s incarceration but not the end of consequences from her role in the FTX fraud. The 10-year industry ban ensures she cannot return to positions of financial power during the prime of her career. The criminal conviction will follow her permanently, affecting employment prospects, travel, and numerous other aspects of daily life.
As the cryptocurrency industry continues to mature under increased regulatory scrutiny, the FTX collapse and its aftermath serve as cautionary tales about the dangers of unchecked power and the misuse of customer funds. Ellison’s cooperation may have shortened her prison time, but the full price of her crimes extends far beyond these 14 months behind bars.


