A convicted crypto founder serving a 25-year federal sentence for orchestrating one of the largest financial frauds in American history is already talking about his next token launch. Accordi
A convicted crypto founder serving a 25-year federal sentence for orchestrating one of the largest financial frauds in American history is already talking about his next token launch. According to the original report by New York Magazine, Sam Bankman-Fried — now 34 — told a fellow inmate he would “start my own coin” after leaving prison and that “everyone will flock to it.” The remark, relayed by inmate David Bunevacz, was tempered by Bunevacz’s own assessment: “He may have been joking, and they probably won’t flock to it. But who knows.”
The exchange is a sharp reminder that the man once hailed as a crypto wunderkind still views himself as a future market force, even while housed in a federal detention center. Bankman-Fried, the founder of the collapsed FTX exchange, was convicted in late 2023 on multiple counts of fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering. He is currently writing a serialized prison memoir titled Manfred and reportedly takes Adderall daily for clinical depression and ADHD, according to the magazine.
A Token from the Penitentiary
The idea that a figure synonymous with one of crypto’s darkest chapters could simply “start a coin” and attract users is either a bizarre joke or a reflection of a market where attention often overrides due diligence. Bankman-Fried’s alleged calculation — that making serious money post-release would require an initial $50 million to $100 million to build a real business — suggests he is not thinking small. Whether any credible venture capital would touch such a project is another question entirely.
The contrast between Bankman-Fried’s talk and the current trajectory of digital assets is stark. While the former FTX chief envisions a personal token, legitimate tokenization is accelerating across institutional markets. Real-world assets on-chain have crossed $20 billion, and major banks are now settling trades using tokenized Treasurys. The industry is gravitating toward compliance and infrastructure, not jailhouse crypto schemes.
Yet the surface-level signal — a disgraced founder still capable of generating headlines with talk of a new coin — exposes a lingering vulnerability. Crypto markets have repeatedly shown that notoriety can be monetized, at least temporarily. The investor class that chased FTX’s FTT token may not be an obvious target, but retail speculation often follows where media attention leads.
Pardon Politics and Polymarket
In parallel, Bankman-Fried formally submitted a presidential pardon application to the Trump administration on June 8. The move immediately shifted sentiment on Polymarket, where the probability of a pardon being granted doubled to 14%. The uptick indicates that at least a slice of market participants see a non-zero chance that political dynamics could alter Bankman-Fried’s fate.
The pardon application lands at a moment when crypto politics in Washington are in flux. Banks are actively trying to derail the biggest crypto bill in US history just days before a Senate vote, signaling that traditional financial interests maintain significant influence over legislation. Whether that environment helps or hurts a figure like Bankman-Fried is unclear, but his request for executive clemency will almost certainly face intense scrutiny.
Polymarket odds, while eye-catching, remain an imperfect gauge. A 14% probability reflects betting activity, not legal analysis. The actual likelihood of a presidential pardon for a high-profile fraud convict remains remote. Still, the very existence of markets on such outcomes shows how deeply the FTX saga has embedded itself into crypto culture as a speculative object.
What the Market Is Watching
For the broader crypto economy, the Bankman-Fried subplot is both a reputational drag and a barometer of maturity. Legitimate development continues apace: this week’s top blockchains by developer activity show Ethereum, BNB Chain, and Polygon leading, evidence that the real building has long since moved past the personalities of the last cycle. Yet the fascination with a jailed founder’s next coin hints at an audience still swayed by narrative over fundamentals.
Whether Bankman-Fried ever launches a token depends first on his release date — decades away, absent a successful appeal or pardon — and second on his ability to raise capital in a vastly changed market. The real risk for users is not that he attempts a comeback, but that the environment that enabled FTX’s blowup has not fully closed the doors on hype-driven, low-accountability projects. Regulators and exchanges will be the first line of defense if that scenario ever materializes.