He was once the face of crypto. A billionaire, a political donor, and a wunderkind who graced magazine covers and testified before Congress.
Now, Sam Bankman-Fried is in prison. And he is asking President Donald Trump for a way out.
The convicted crypto fraudster has made an appeal to the White House for a pardon, according to reports. His case — one of the largest financial frauds in American history — is now in the hands of a president who has shown sympathy toward white-collar criminals and has used his pardon power aggressively.
Bankman-Fried was sentenced to 25 years in prison after being found guilty of defrauding customers of his FTX cryptocurrency exchange. Prosecutors said he stole billions of dollars from investors and users, using the money for luxury real estate, political donations, and risky trades through his hedge fund, Alameda Research.
His appeal to Trump is not a legal filing. It is a political plea.
The Pardon Power
Trump has already used his pardon power to benefit allies and controversial figures. He has commuted sentences. He has issued full pardons. He has created a $1.8 billion “anti-weaponization” fund that critics say could be used to compensate January 6 defendants.

Bankman-Fried is not a political ally. He was a major donor to Democratic causes before his arrest. He gave millions to Joe Biden’s 2020 campaign and to other Democratic candidates and super PACs. But Trump has shown that he is willing to cross traditional partisan lines when it suits him.
The question is whether Bankman-Fried has anything to offer in return.
The Crypto Connection
The crypto industry has been watching the Trump administration closely. The president has been friendlier to digital assets than his predecessor, and his administration has signaled openness to lighter regulation. A pardon for Bankman-Fried would send a powerful message to the crypto world: even its biggest villain can find redemption in Washington.
But it would also spark outrage. The victims of FTX’s collapse lost billions. Many have not recovered. Pardoning Bankman-Fried would be seen by many as a betrayal of ordinary investors who were wiped out by his fraud.
The Political Calculus
Trump is facing a tough midterm election. He needs the support of the crypto industry, which has grown in political influence. He also needs to energize his base, which may not care about a white-collar criminal from the Democratic donor class.
A pardon for Bankman-Fried would be controversial. But Trump has never shied away from controversy. He has praised the January 6 rioters. He has attacked judges and prosecutors. He has tested the limits of presidential power at every turn.
Pardoning Bankman-Fried would be consistent with that pattern. Whether it happens depends on what the former crypto king can offer — and whether Trump decides that the political cost is worth it.
The Bottom Line
Sam Bankman-Fried, the convicted founder of FTX, has appealed to President Trump for a pardon. He is serving 25 years for orchestrating one of the largest financial frauds in US history. Trump has used his pardon power aggressively, benefiting allies and controversial figures. The crypto industry is watching closely. Victims of the FTX collapse are bracing for potential betrayal.
Bankman-Fried built an empire on deception. Now, he is betting that the same Washington he once courted can set him free.




