FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried formally applied for a presidential pardon via the DOJ website, escalating his long-shot bid for freedom despite President Trump’s repeated rejections.
The convicted crypto executive, serving a 25-year federal sentence handed down on March 28, 2024, for orchestrating fraud that prosecutors said stole over $8 billion in customer funds, took the official step on the Office of the Pardon Attorney portal.
A jury convicted Bankman-Fried in November 2023 on seven counts of fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering tied to the November 2022 collapse of FTX and Alameda Research.
U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan imposed the 25-year term plus $11 billion forfeiture, citing the unprecedented scale and harm to victims.
Bankman-Fried has maintained his innocence, arguing in interviews and social media that FTX faced a liquidity crisis rather than insolvency and that his prosecution reflected political targeting.
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The application caps months of public positioning, including pro-Trump posts on X (Twitter) and a prison interview.
His parents, Stanford professors Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, have explored clemency options with Trump-connected lawyers since early 2025.
Trump explicitly ruled out a pardon in a January 2026 New York Times interview and White House statements, grouping SBF with figures he has no plans to help.
Pro-crypto Republicans in Congress have also pushed back sharply, with one calling Bankman-Fried “a piece of s–t” unfit for mercy.
FTX’s bankruptcy estate has distributed billions, with many customer classes recovering 100-120% of allowed claims valued at the November 2022 petition date.
A fourth distribution in March 2026 delivered $2.2 billion, pushing U.S. customer claims to full recovery in key buckets.
This contrasts sharply with the fraud’s initial $8+ billion hole and underscores why SBF’s case remains toxic even as Trump has pardoned other crypto figures like Ross Ulbricht and Binance’s CZ.
The DOJ will review the application under standard procedures, though presidents can act independently.
Appeals of SBF’s conviction continue. No White House shift has emerged as of June 2026, making meaningful relief unlikely in the near term.
It explains why Polymarket bettors see only a meager 7% chance SBF will receive a Trump pardon in 2026.
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