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Home»Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance»Sam Bankman-Fried Court Letter Under Scrutiny As Parents Call For Clemency
Cryptocurrency & Free Speech Finance

Sam Bankman-Fried Court Letter Under Scrutiny As Parents Call For Clemency

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Sam Bankman-Fried Court Letter Under Scrutiny As Parents Call For Clemency
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In brief

  • Prosecutors said a March filing submitted in Sam Bankman-Fried’s name appears to have been sent from San Francisco, raising questions over its authenticity.
  • Bankman-Fried’s parents went public March 21 calling his prosecution political and his sentence excessive.
  • The clemency push comes as the fallout from FTX’s collapse continues to shape crypto policy debates.

Federal prosecutors have cast doubt on a recent court filing purportedly sent from prison by former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried, telling a judge that a March 16 letter submitted in his name may not have been sent from prison but instead shipped via FedEx from the San Francisco Bay Area.

In a filing, prosecutors said the letter appeared inconsistent with Bureau of Prisons rules, which prohibit inmates from using private carriers. The envelope labeled the facility incorrectly, FedEx tracking data pointed to pickup in Palo Alto or Menlo Park, and the document bore a typed “/s/” signature rather than a handwritten one, discrepancies the government said give it “reason to doubt” the letter was actually sent by Bankman-Fried.

The letter asked for a one-month extension to April 16 to respond to a government brief. It cited an expected transfer from FCI Terminal Island and warned he could spend weeks without access to legal materials, counsel or the courts while in transit through Bureau of Prisons facilities.

The court wrangling comes as Bankman-Fried’s family ramps up a public campaign to recast his case and press for clemency. In a March 21 CNN interview, his parents, Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, argued that his prosecution was politically motivated and his 25-year sentence excessive.

“I think we have a really serious problem with prosecution being used for political ambition,” Fried said, adding that she believed the Biden administration had tried to “destroy crypto.”

Bankman rejected comparisons between his son and Bernie Madoff, saying that “Sam built billion dollar businesses in a new field and was a pioneer for doing so.”

They also challenged the core allegations, portraying FTX’s failure as a liquidity crisis rather than fraud. Fried said “all of the money was turned over” and argued customers were ultimately repaid with interest, while Bankman said transfers to Alameda Research reflected borrowing within the platform.

Bankman-Fried fired his lawyers in early February and is currently representing himself. However, separate filings from March 16 also show tensions around his family’s involvement in Bankman-Fried’s legal strategy.

A letter submitted in his name but written by his mother, a Stanford Law professor, sought an extension of time in the case. U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan rejected the filing, writing that she “lacks standing” to seek relief because she is not counsel of record and has not appeared in the case, and noted the letter did not indicate it had been served on prosecutors.

Kaplan also said court staff had received a voicemail from someone identifying herself as Fried, adding that the court does not accept telephone calls from litigants or their family members. While declining her request, the judge extended the deadline on his own to March 23, allowing Bankman-Fried’s attorneys to seek relief properly if needed.

The collapse of FTX

FTX’s collapse in November 2022 remains one of the largest failures in the history of digital assets. The exchange, once valued at $32 billion, imploded after a surge in withdrawal requests exposed a shortfall tied to the use of customer funds by its affiliated trading firm, Alameda.

Prosecutors said roughly $8 billion in customer money was missing at the time of the bankruptcy, and a jury later convicted Bankman-Fried on seven counts including fraud, conspiracy and money laundering. Bankman-Fried remains in federal custody serving a 25-year sentence.

Whether customers were “made whole” has become central to Bankman-Fried’s post-conviction arguments. While the bankruptcy estate has recovered enough to repay many claims based on 2022 valuations, critics say that understates losses because crypto prices later rebounded sharply, meaning customers would have held far more valuable assets had their funds not been frozen.

In early 2024, the FTX estate sold off its 8% stake in Anthropic, which it invested $500 million in in 2021, for $1.3 billion across two sales. Today it would be worth over $30 billion.

Other cases have raised hopes of a pardon among Bankman-Fried’s supporters. President Donald Trump’s 2025 pardon of Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao signaled a more crypto-friendly posture in Washington and a willingness to revisit prior enforcement.

Since his X account became active again in September last year, Bankman-Fried has increasingly tailored his public messaging to themes aligned with Trump and his allies, criticizing Biden-era crypto policy and raising claims of prosecutorial overreach as he pursues relief.

However, Congress has not been receptive to the push. Senator Bernie Moreno (R-Ohio) called Bankman-Fried a “piece of shit” earlier this month, according to Politico, adding that, “The guy shouldn’t be pardoned. The guy should go to jail for a long, long time.”

Trump indicated in February he currently has no plans to offer a pardon.

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