Caroline Ellison, former CEO of Alameda Research and the star witness in the FTX fraud trials, was released from federal custody on Wednesday. Bureau of Prisons (BOP) records confirm Ellison, 31, exited a New York residential reentry management facility on Jan. 21 after serving approximately 14 months of her two-year sentence.
The early release, roughly 10 months ahead of her original schedule, stems from credits earned under the First Step Act for good conduct and participation in recidivism reduction programs. Ellison had been transferred from a low-security prison in Danbury, Connecticut, to community confinement in October 2025.
The Cooperation Discount
Ellison’s 440-day stint stands in stark contrast to the 25-year sentence handed to her former partner and FTX founder, Sam Bankman-Fried. While Bankman-Fried is not eligible for release until 2044, Ellison leveraged her role as the government’s primary witness to secure leniency. Her testimony dismantled the defense’s claim that Alameda’s borrowing of $8 billion in customer funds was a misunderstanding, labeling it directed fraud.
“I am deeply ashamed of what we did. I knew it was wrong.”, Caroline Ellison, Sentencing Hearing (Sept. 2024)
Other cooperating executives fared even better: former CTO Gary Wang and Engineering Director Nishad Singh received no prison time.
Regulatory Aftershocks
While free from prison, Ellison is effectively exiled from the financial sector. As part of a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), she faces a 10-year ban from serving as an officer or director of any public company or digital asset exchange. This prohibition mirrors similar, albeit shorter, bans agreed to by Wang and Singh (8 years).
Markets ignored the closure. The FTT token, a zombie asset tied to the defunct exchange’s bankruptcy estate, hovered at $0.49 (-0.6%), showing zero volatility on the news. Volume remains thin at $3.5 million, comprised almost entirely of speculative trading on legacy pairs.