Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder of the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange FTX, is reportedly seeking a presidential pardon from Donald Trump. The White House has remained silent on the matter, though sources close to the former president suggest the request is being considered. For a man who once bestrode the crypto world like a colossus, this is a dramatic fall from grace.
Bankman-Fried, currently serving a 25-year sentence for fraud and money laundering, has apparently decided that his best hope lies with a man whose own approach to legal entanglements is, shall we say, creative. The irony is almost too rich: the libertarian poster boy of digital finance now begging for a political lifeline. One can almost hear the ghost of Milton Friedman weeping.
The market implications are negligible, but the symbolism is potent. It confirms what we always suspected: that crypto’s promise of a stateless utopia was always just a fancy way of saying 'I want to break the rules without consequence.' Now Bankman-Fried wants a pardon, which is a bit like a arsonist asking for a matchbox.
The White House silence is deafening, but likely calculated. Trump, ever the dealmaker, may see this as an opportunity to burnish his image as a champion of the 'little guy' or as a cynical ploy to court the crypto vote. Either way, the Bottom Line is clear: this is a man who bet everything on a bubble and lost.
The only question left is whether the next bubble will be inflated by political patronage.








