A Second Circuit Court of Appeals panel rejected
Sam Bankman-Fried's effort to overturn his conviction on fraud and conspiracy charges tied to the operation and collapse of FTX on Friday. The panel ruled that the onetime crypto executive's arguments that his trial was unfair "were not persuasive", going through his contention that he was prevented from presenting all of his legal arguments and that he was blocked from contending that FTX's investments would do well. The panel said
Bankman-Fried made his arguments "in the face of a trial at which the government's evidence against him was... robust," per CoinDesk. The Block and the Guardian carried the same outcome under the new-trial-rejected framing.
What was the trial-fairness contention?
Bankman-Fried had said he was prevented from presenting all his legal arguments and was blocked from contending that FTX's investments would do well, per CoinDesk. The panel ruled Judge Lewis Kaplan — who oversaw the trial — did not make errors in how he handled objections or his rulings about specific evidence the prosecution and defense wanted to introduce.
What was the "investments would do well" claim? One position
Bankman-Fried advanced was that the funds he misappropriated were in investments that would eventually grow. The panel ruled any contention that he lacked intent to defraud because he intended to eventually repay customers was "legally misleading and prejudicial because the wire fraud statute encompasses temporary misappropriation of money or property."
Why does the "robust" evidence framing matter? The Second Circuit's "conservatively stated, robust" characterisation of the government's evidence does double duty: it disposes of the trial-fairness arguments and pre-emptively closes a future "wrongful conviction" pardon framing. Any clemency argument now runs on mercy-for-time-served grounds rather than on conviction-doubt — politically harder.
What's the procedural status? The 25-year prison sentence stands, per CoinTelegraph. The Block framed it as the appeals court rejecting the new-trial bid — the practical-effect framing that locks
Bankman-Fried's post-conviction options to a narrow remaining lane.
Where does the
Trump clemency petition sit now?
Bankman-Fried formally filed a clemency petition with the White House the week before the appeal ruling — the timing now makes the petition look prescient rather than premature, per the Guardian's framing. A
Trump decision becomes the only practical exit avenue besides a long-tail Supreme Court petition.
Figures referenced: Sam Bankman-Fried, Donald Trump. — JudgeMarket.