Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman, the parents of convicted FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, gave their first televised interview on CNN’s Smerconish over the weekend. They argued their son’s conviction is unjust because, they claim, FTX customers got their money back.
The interview came just before a major FTX payout. The FTX Recovery Trust is set to distribute about $2.2 billion at the end of March. That will bring total recoveries to roughly $10 billion.
But there is a key detail the parents did not address clearly. All distributions are calculated in U.S. dollars, fixed to asset prices from the November 2022 bankruptcy filing. At that time, Bitcoin was trading near $16,800.
Bitcoin now trades around $69,000. At its peak in late 2025, it crossed $126,000.
A creditor who held one Bitcoin when FTX collapsed is not getting one Bitcoin back. They are getting the 2022 dollar value of that Bitcoin, plus interest. That is a very different outcome.
Joseph Bankman also defended the transfer of customer funds to Alameda Research, FTX’s sister trading firm. He described it as routine borrowing, comparing it to standard market activity.
That argument runs directly against new regulations passed after FTX’s collapse. Hong Kong, the European Union, and proposed U.S. legislation all now ban the mixing of customer funds with proprietary trading firms. Regulators created those rules specifically because of what happened at FTX.
The family has been pushing for a pardon from President Donald Trump. SBF has continued to post White House policy support from prison on X.
Trump said in a January interview with the New York Times that he would not pardon Bankman-Fried. This is despite having granted clemency to other crypto figures, including Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht and former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao.
Polymarket currently puts the odds of a pardon at 12%.
SBF’s appeal remains pending. Prosecutors have dismissed his claims of political bias, and his motion for a new trial faces ongoing opposition.
The post Sam Bankman-Fried’s Parents Say FTX Customers Got Paid Back. Here’s Why Creditors Disagree. appeared first on CoinCentral.


