The odds of a presidential pardon for Sam Bankman-Fried have slipped deeper into single digits after a high-profile CNN interview featuring his parents reignited controversy around the FTX collapse — and may have done more harm than good.
Parents challenge the narrative — and reignite scrutiny
On Polymarket, traders now assign just an 11% chance of a pardon in 2026, while Kalshi prices it even lower at 9%. Both slipped further following the March 21 interview, signaling growing skepticism that political intervention is coming.
The drop may appear small, but in prediction markets, momentum matters. And right now, sentiment is turning decisively against SBF.
In the interview, Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried mounted a full-throated defense of their son, rejecting the fraud narrative that underpinned his conviction.
They argued that Alameda Research simply borrowed funds like any other user on FTX, insisting the money was never misused and always backed by sufficient assets.
“The money was always there.”
But the defense cuts both ways. Their comments revived uncomfortable questions about their own involvement — including allegations in FTX’s bankruptcy filings that they received millions in cash transfers and a luxury Bahamas property tied to the exchange.
Political conspiracy claims escalate the stakes
Bankman-Fried's parents went further and framed the entire prosecution as politically motivated. Fried accused the Biden administration of trying to “destroy crypto,” while the family’s legal team is now pushing to overturn the conviction and even replace Judge Lewis Kaplan, citing alleged bias.
The strategy marks a dramatic pivot: from legal defense to outright political confrontation. In the most striking moment, Fried made a direct plea to Donald Trump, arguing that her son could be an “asset” to the country if freed.
But if the goal was to boost pardon prospects, the market reaction suggests the opposite.
Even within crypto-friendly circles, support for SBF appears to be dissipating. Senator Cynthia Lummis openly warned against clemency, while Trump himself has reportedly indicated he would not grant a pardon.
Behind the scenes, the family has been lobbying figures close to Trump since 2025 — but so far, it hasn’t moved the needle.
Prediction markets are often described as real-time truth machines — and their message here is stark.
At just 9–11% odds, traders are effectively pricing in near-zero political will to rescue SBF. To put it in perspective, markets currently see a far higher likelihood of a U.S.-Iran ceasefire than a Bankman-Fried pardon.
For a figure once at the center of crypto’s rise, the shift is dramatic.
From crypto king to political long shot
The interview was meant to reshape the narrative. Instead, it may have reinforced doubts — not just about the case, but about the feasibility of a last-minute political lifeline.
As appeals continue and lobbying efforts intensify, one thing is clear:
In the eyes of the market, Sam Bankman-Fried’s chances of a pardon are fading fast — and even a media blitz may not be enough to reverse the trend.