Sam Bankman-Fried formally filed a clemency petition with the White House on Monday seeking a presidential pardon from
Donald Trump for the FTX fraud conviction that put him in federal prison on a 25-year sentence. The filing is a formal bet on
Trump's history of crypto-side pardons even though the president had told
Bankman-Fried directly not to count on one, CoinDesk reported. The petition was filed as an officially-docketed request rather than a back-channel approach, per the BBC's coverage.
What did
Bankman-Fried file? A formal clemency petition with the office that processes presidential pardons, Bitcoin Magazine reported. The filing format puts the request on the official pardon-track docket rather than relying on direct White House outreach.
Why does
Trump's prior signal matter?
Trump had publicly said
Bankman-Fried should not expect a pardon, Bitcoin Magazine reported. The "don't count on it" line gives the president political cover to deny without appearing inconsistent, while still leaving room to grant if the calculation changes.
What's the market response? FTX's FTT token spiked roughly 50% on the pardon filing, CryptoSlate reported, in a speculative move betting on a pardon outcome that would unlock asset-recovery proceedings. The token move treats the filing as a meaningful trajectory shift rather than a procedural step.
Why is the
Trump pardon-pattern relevant?
Trump's second term has produced several crypto-adjacent and politically-aligned pardons, with the Buyer insider-trading pardon last week the freshest data point, CoinDesk reported. A
Bankman-Fried grant would extend the same pattern into the largest financial-fraud conviction the administration would have addressed.
What does the political read look like? Pardoning a Democratic-donor crypto founder convicted of customer-funds fraud would scramble the partisan framing the administration has used on other pardons, the BBC reported. The Buyer pardon already gave Democratic critics a "fraud crackdown only on opponents" attack line; an
Bankman-Fried grant would land into that same active debate.
What's the timeline? Clemency petitions can sit at the Justice Department for months or years before reaching the president, with no formal deadline for response, CoinDesk reported. The filing itself becomes the news event; the actual decision is on the president's own clock.
Figures referenced: Sam Bankman-Fried, Donald Trump. — JudgeMarket.