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4/4 🧵 The article also frames SBF’s case in the broader pardon-heavy climate of Trump’s second term, noting more than 1,400 pardons have already been issued since January 2025. But SBF is a special case: he’s not some gray-area offender, he’s the face of a catastrophic fraud that wrecked users, firms, and crypto credibility. A filing is easy. A pardon here would be a political grenade. 📎 Source

#threadstorm

3/4 🧵 Politically, the road looks ugly for him. The piece notes Trump said in January he would not pardon Bankman-Fried. It also points to strong Republican pushback, including Sen. Bernie Moreno bluntly saying SBF should stay in prison, and Sen. Cynthia Lummis arguing he hurt a lot of people. Translation: this isn’t just legally toxic — it’s politically radioactive too.

2/4 🧵 The article says SBF’s pardon request is formally listed as pending with the DOJ Office of the Pardon Attorney. It describes the filing as a “pardon after completion of sentence” request submitted in 2026. He’s serving time after being convicted on seven charges tied to fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering connected to FTX and Alameda Research — the same empire that torched billions in customer funds and trust.

1/4 🧵 Sam Bankman-Fried is now openly asking Donald Trump for a pardon while serving 25 years for the FTX fraud. That’s the headline. The bigger point: one of crypto’s most infamous blowups is trying to turn into a political mercy play, despite Trump already saying earlier this year that he wouldn’t pardon him.