Three Years After FTX Collapsed SBF Remains in Prison With No Path to a New Trial
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The collapse of FTX in November 2022 wiped out billions of dollars in customer funds and became one of the defining financial scandals of the crypto era. Three years on, Sam Bankman-Fried remains in a federal prison in Lompoc, California, serving a 25-year sentence after being found guilty on seven criminal charges including fraud and money laundering. A jury determined that he illegally transferred billions of dollars of FTX customer money to his trading firm Alameda Research to fund risky trades that contributed directly to the exchange's collapse. The latest rejection of his new trial motion by Judge Kaplan closes another door in what has become a systematic attempt to reopen a case that the courts have consistently found was properly decided.
The pattern of Bankman-Fried's post-conviction behavior has been notable. He appeared on a podcast in March 2025 while held at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, filed a new trial motion without consulting his lawyers while an appeals court was reviewing his sentence, then attempted to withdraw that motion after suggesting he could not get a fair hearing from the presiding judge. Judge Kaplan's characterization of the entire new trial effort as part of a pre-indictment reputation rescue plan frames these moves not as legitimate legal strategy but as a continuation of a public relations effort that began before criminal charges were even filed. With the appeals process still ongoing but the new trial avenue now closed, Bankman-Fried's options for reducing his 25-year sentence are narrowing significantly.