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Just saw this wild case update - Avi Eisenberg's fraud convictions got overturned by a federal judge. Apparently the prosecutors couldn't prove he actually lied to Mango Markets, which is pretty interesting given what went down.
So for context, Eisenberg pumped MNGO's price up over 1000% in like 20 minutes by doing massive trades, then used that inflated collateral to borrow and withdraw $110 million from the platform. The whole thing worked because Mango Markets was permissionless - anyone could just trade freely without restrictions. His defense basically said he just found a vulnerability and used it, and the judge actually agreed there wasn't enough evidence of fraud.
The wild part? He's still doing time on a separate case from 2022. But this particular conviction just got thrown out. Makes you think about how these DeFi exploits actually work legally - is it fraud if the protocol literally allows it? MNGO is trading around $0.03 now, so yeah, the project never really recovered from this.
Also saw some drama between two major exchange founders in the same news cycle about old contract disputes, but that's a whole other mess. Anyway, Avi Eisenberg's case being overturned is definitely one of those moments that makes you question what "fraud" even means in crypto.