Sam Bankman-Fried, the fallen crypto mogul whose name became synonymous with one of the industry's most devastating collapses, is making a move few saw coming- a formal request for a presidential pardon.
Records from the Justice Department's Office of the Pardon Attorney confirm that Bankman-Fried, currently serving a 25-year federal prison sentence, has filed for a pardon after completion of sentence. It is a long shot by any measure, but for a man with few options left, it appears to be a calculated one.
Bankman-Fried, now 34, was convicted in 2024 on seven felony counts spanning fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering all tied to what prosecutors described as deliberate fraudulent schemes run through his FTX cryptocurrency exchange.
The charges were severe, and so was the sentence. But behind bars, Bankman-Fried has not gone quiet.
Through a prison-approved account on X, he has been posting regularly and strategically. Earlier this month, a post was shared highlighting the S&P 500 reaching another all-time high under the current administration, contrasted with slower growth figures from the previous one. In March, commentary was offered on the Iran situation, weighing the costs of military action against the reality of a nuclear threat.
The posts read less like a man resigned to his fate and more like one still angling for relevance or redemption.
His family has also been active behind the scenes, separately seeking a pardon on his behalf.
Presidential clemency has been granted to more than 1,600 convicts during this term, including at least one prominent crypto figure. Changpeng Zhao, the former head of crypto exchange Binance, received a pardon after serving four months in prison for violations of anti-money laundering and sanctions law.
That precedent has likely not been lost on Bankman-Fried or his legal team.
However, Trump made his position on the matter clear earlier this year, stating publicly that he had no intention of pardoning Bankman-Fried and placing him alongside a list of other high-profile convicts deemed unworthy of clemency.
The case against Bankman-Fried was built on a straightforward but damning allegation: billions of dollars were stolen from FTX customers and quietly funneled into his affiliated quantitative trading firm, Alameda Research. Those funds were then used to finance investments, personal loans, real estate purchases, and political donations.
When a surge in customer withdrawals hit FTX in late 2022, the missing money was exposed. The exchange collapsed almost overnight. Close to $9 billion in customer funds was lost.
His defense argued throughout the trial that the young executive had acted out of inexperience rather than malice, and that circumstances beyond his control had contributed to the collapse. The jury was not persuaded.
Bankman-Fried is currently housed at a low-security federal prison in California, near Santa Barbara. Under reduced sentencing guidelines for good behavior, an earliest possible release date of 2044 has been calculated meaning he would be in his mid-fifties before walking free without a pardon.
Whether Trump changes his position remains to be seen. For now, the man once celebrated as crypto's golden boy is doing what he has always done playing the odds and hoping the numbers eventually turn in his favor.