Sam Bankman-Fried BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
The crypto world has been buzzing about Sam Bankman-Fried in the wake of Donald Trump’s surprise pardon of Binance founder Changpeng Zhao on October 23. While CZ’s white-collar convictions were for compliance failures, Sam Bankman-Fried’s crimes—found guilty on seven felony counts related to his orchestration of one of the largest frauds in crypto history—are in another league entirely, involving the misappropriation of about eight billion dollars in customer funds through FTX and Alameda Research as well as massive political donations and a 25-year prison sentence, according to widespread reporting by sources like TheStreet and Bitcoinist.
Following the CZ pardon, speculation exploded that SBF could be next. Within hours, betting platforms like Polymarket saw the odds of Bankman-Fried earning a presidential pardon leap from just 4% up to 16%. CoinDesk and Crypto News both report that these shifts were driven purely by market speculation, social media frenzy, and a few viral tweets—not any official statement from Trump’s team or the White House. Some prominent crypto voices on X, like investigator Coffeezilla, have promised to “quit” if SBF is pardoned, while Polymarket fueled the meme with a post titled “Sam Bankman-Freed,” a post that SBF’s own X account retweeted—though the account is still marked as “SBF’s words, shared by a friend,” meaning it is run by someone in his circle rather than the man himself.
The possibility of a pardon has also been embraced by SBF’s family. As reported by Crypto Patel, his parents have been quietly lobbying for months, connecting with Republican insiders and pitching the notion that their son was unfairly targeted. In fact, SBF’s mother recently published a detailed essay defending him, hoping to tip public opinion. Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried continues to maintain—in recent interviews from FCI-Terminal Island prison and a long-form piece with Mother Jones—that his real mistake was ceding control of FTX to a new CEO during bankruptcy, not fraud, and that he could have saved the firm if left in charge.
Though the chatter is loud, credible legal experts quoted by sources like TheStreet and Variant Fund remain deeply skeptical that SBF could ever receive the same treatment as CZ, since his actions caused direct losses to millions and left an ugly scar on the crypto industry’s reputation. As for breaking news, prediction markets have cooled off a bit, with Polymarket and Kalshi dropping odds to the 12% range as reality, for now, sets in. SBF’s formal appeal is set for November 4, but legal watchers doubt it will yield any sudden change. For now, Sam Bankman-Fried remains crypto’s ultimate cautionary tale, back in the headlines as a symbol of what happens when ambition, politics, and money collide.
Get the best deals
https://amzn.to/3ODvOtaThis content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI