Caroline Ellison, once a key figure in the FTX cryptocurrency empire, has been freed from federal custody after serving roughly 14 months of a two-year sentence for her role in a massive fraud. The 31-year-old, who led FTX's trading arm and was romantically linked to founder Sam Bankman-Fried, cooperated extensively with prosecutors against her former partner. Her release marks a quiet close to one of the biggest financial scandals in US history.
Caroline Ellison's release from federal custody on January 22, 2026, comes after she pleaded guilty in 2024 to seven charges, including wire fraud and money laundering, related to the collapse of FTX. The cryptocurrency exchange, once valued among the world's largest, unraveled in a scandal involving an $8 billion fraud that shook markets and prompted greater regulatory attention to the industry.
Ellison, who headed Alameda Research, FTX's affiliated trading firm, began her 24-month sentence in a Connecticut prison. She was moved to community confinement in October 2025, according to the Bureau of Prisons, before departing the facility this week. At her sentencing, Judge Lewis Kaplan praised her unprecedented cooperation, stating he had "never seen someone cooperate with prosecutors like Ellison in his 30 years on the bench." Despite this, he imposed jail time due to the crimes' gravity and required her to forfeit $11 billion in assets.
Her testimony proved pivotal in the trial of Sam Bankman-Fried, her intermittent romantic partner and FTX's founder. Ellison described how Bankman-Fried instructed her to engage in illegal activities. He received a 25-year sentence and is now incarcerated in a low-security facility in Los Angeles. Bankman-Fried sought a pardon from President Donald Trump, including a jailhouse interview with Tucker Carlson, but Trump told the New York Times this month he has no such plans.
The FTX saga drew widespread scrutiny, amplified by Ellison's online presence on Tumblr discussing topics like race science and polyamory, which fueled public and media commentary. Other executives' turn against Bankman-Fried created courtroom drama. Netflix plans to dramatize the events, with Julia Garner portraying Ellison.