Sam Bankman-Fried sentence affirmed by Second Circuit after appeal loss
The Second Circuit on Friday affirmed Sam Bankman-Fried’s 25-year sentence, leaving the FTX founder’s fraud conviction intact after a unanimous appellate ruling rejected his bid to overturn the case.[4][7] The decision matters because it removes his main legal path to a shorter prison term and keeps one of crypto’s most consequential fraud cases firmly closed at the appellate level.[4][7]
Key Metrics
- The Second Circuit upheld Bankman-Fried’s 25-year prison sentence, confirming the punishment imposed after his 2023 conviction.[4][5]
- The appellate panel rejected his challenge to trial rulings, including claims that the judge unfairly limited evidence at trial.[4][7]
- The court described the government’s proof as “robust”, underscoring the strength of the fraud case on appeal.[4][7]
- The ruling leaves the $11 billion forfeiture order tied to the FTX collapse in place, according to reporting on the decision.[3][5]
- Reuters and AP both reported that the three-judge panel unanimously rejected the appeal, indicating broad judicial agreement.[4][7]
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Second Circuit affirms Sam Bankman-Fried sentence
The ruling came from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York and was reported Friday by Reuters and the Associated Press.[4][7] The panel found no basis to disturb the conviction or sentence, ending Bankman-Fried’s attempt to reverse the outcome of the criminal case that followed the collapse of FTX.
Judge Barrington D. Parker authored the opinion, according to AP’s report on the decision.[4] The appellate court’s language was notably forceful, calling the government’s case “conservatively stated, robust,” a formulation that signals the panel saw the evidence against Bankman-Fried as more than sufficient.[4][7]
The ruling is a significant setback for Bankman-Fried because it leaves him with limited remaining options.[1][2] Reuters-linked reporting cited in other coverage said a presidential pardon is now his only realistic avenue for early release, although there has been no public indication that such relief is likely.[1][2][7]
What the court rejected
The appeal focused on arguments that the trial was unfair because the judge restricted evidence Bankman-Fried wanted to present.[4][7] The Second Circuit rejected that claim, and it also left intact the conviction on seven counts tied to fraud and conspiracy.[1][3][4]
| Item | Appellate outcome | Market/legal implication |
|---|---|---|
| Prison sentence | 25 years affirmed | Sentencing risk for crypto fraud cases remains severe |
| Conviction | Seven counts upheld | Criminal liability remains fully intact |
| Forfeiture | About $11 billion remains in place | Financial penalties stay material |
| Appeal | Denied unanimously | Limited near-term legal upside for the defense |
AP reported that prosecutors had shown Bankman-Fried defrauded customers and investors of billions while running FTX, once one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges.[4] The appeals court’s decision means that finding stands, barring any future extraordinary relief.
Why the Bankman-Fried sentence still matters to crypto
The case remains one of the clearest examples of how aggressively U.S. courts and prosecutors can respond to misconduct in digital assets.[4][5] For market participants, the outcome reinforces that exchange governance, custody practices and disclosures remain central risk factors, especially when platforms control client assets and commingle balance-sheet exposure.
Analysts note that the ruling also closes one more chapter in the post-FTX cleanup period, but it does not erase the broader damage from the exchange’s collapse.[4][5] Investor behavior across the sector has already shifted toward tighter due diligence and, in some cases, greater interest in self-custody and regulated venues, though the available reports do not quantify that shift directly.
Remaining uncertainty around Bankman-Fried sentence
One uncertainty is whether Bankman-Fried will pursue further legal or political relief, including clemency.[1][2][7] Another is timing: while the conviction and sentence are now affirmed, the practical end state for any remaining restitution or forfeiture processes can still depend on separate administrative and court steps.[5]
A downside scenario for Bankman-Fried is that the appellate loss leaves him exposed to the full sentence with no clear judicial off-ramp.[4][7] For the industry, the more durable risk is reputational: the FTX case continues to shape how regulators, institutions and retail users assess counterparty risk in crypto.
- https://www.kucoin.com/news/flash/second-circuit-upholds-sbf-s-25-year-sentence-for-fraud
- https://www.cointribune.com/en/sam-bankman-loses-his-appeal-the-federal-court-confirms-his-conviction-for-fraud/
- https://www.kucoin.com/news/flash/u-s-appeals-court-upholds-sbf-s-fraud-conviction-rejects-repayment-argument
- https://www.usnews.com/news/best-states/new-york/articles/2026-06-12/appeals-court-upholds-ftx-co-founder-sam-bankman-frieds-fraud-conviction
- https://www.justice.gov/archives/opa/pr/samuel-bankman-fried-sentenced-25-years-his-orchestration-multiple-fraudulent-schemes
- https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/6/12/sam-bankman-fried-loses-appeal-to-overturn-fraud-convictions-and-prison
- https://www.kucoin.com/news/flash/judge-rejects-sam-bankman-frieds-appeal-over-25-year-sentence







