Sam Bankman-Fried’s Clemency Bid Fails as Trump Draws Line on Crypto Pardons

What You Need to Know
- Sam Bankman-Fried submitted formal clemency petition; White House rejected pardon request in January.
- Trump pardoned crypto executive Changpeng Zhao in October 2025 for Bank Secrecy Act violation.
- Bankman-Fried convicted on seven felony counts; Trump grouped him with Sean Combs and Bob Menendez.
- Second Circuit appeal argues conviction should be overturned; favorable ruling could reopen FTX prosecution questions.
Sam Bankman-Fried has submitted a formal clemency petition through the Justice Department’s Pardon Attorney’s Office, converting months of prison-cell flattery directed at the Trump administration into an official application. The White House responded by repeating what it said in January: no pardon is coming.
The formal petition is the least interesting development here. What matters more is that Trump has already drawn a clear line between crypto figures he considers sympathetic and Bankman-Fried specifically. Changpeng Zhao received a pardon in October 2025 after pleading guilty to a single Bank Secrecy Act violation and cooperating fully with authorities. Ross Ulbricht’s pardon in January 2025 carried obvious political symbolism for a libertarian-leaning base that had campaigned for it for years. Bankman-Fried fits neither template: he ran a public campaign for regulatory frameworks that many in the current administration found hostile to crypto’s expansion, donated heavily to Democrats before the political winds shifted, and was convicted on seven felony counts covering conduct that directly harmed retail customers. Trump’s explicit grouping of him with Sean Combs and Bob Menendez in January was not casual; it was a signal to anyone paying attention.
Prediction markets are pricing his release by end of 2026 at 6%, which is probably generous given the White House’s stated position.
The more consequential legal track is the Second Circuit appeal, where his attorneys argued in November 2025 that the conviction should be overturned. A favorable ruling there would not just free him faster than any pardon could; it would reopen questions about how FTX’s collapse was prosecuted and potentially complicate the narrative the bankruptcy estate has used to justify its creditor payouts. The estate’s claim that customers recovered roughly 170 cents on the dollar sounds better than the $8 billion loss figure in the court record, but those numbers measure different things at different points in time, and a successful appeal would force that distinction into public view again. That is the outcome the broader crypto industry, which has largely moved on, would find most disruptive.
The Second Circuit could rule at any point. If the appeal fails, Bankman-Fried has indicated he will petition the Supreme Court, and separately reserved the right to refile his motion for a new trial once the direct appeal concludes and the case is reassigned to a new judge.
0 Comments