In the courts
Fellow crypto felon Sam Bankman-Fried has been working to rehabilitate his image as he prepares for his upcoming appeal hearings. He’s spent the last 19 months or so in prison after being found guilty on all counts in the FTX fraud trial, though he has continued to maintain his innocence. Since Trump’s election, he’s attempted to jump on the same bandwagon of complaining that his prosecution was based on not on the billions of dollars in customer funds he illegally squandered and his other various crimes, but instead on “Biden’s anti-crypto SEC/DOJ [that] went after me”. Earlier this year, SBF used prison interviews with the New York Sun and Tucker Carlson to spread his message [I78, 79]; now he’s proxying social media posts through a friend on the outside. Though once known as a Democratic megadonor, Bankman-Fried has begun emphasizing his history of dark-money contributions to Republicans, posting, “In 2020, I was center-left. By 2022—having seen Gensler/Biden's DOJ on crypto—I was a centrist, and (privately) donated tens of millions to Republicans.”7’
Bankman-Fried seems to be angling for a pardon of his own if his appeal is unsuccessful, though whether Trump would oblige is less clear. Unlike CZ, who is one of the wealthiest men in the world and continues to be a powerful and relatively well-liked figure in the crypto industry, Bankman-Fried is staring down the remainder of a 25-year prison sentence, with few assets to his name, high-profile links to Democr