Joseph Bankman and Barbara Fried, parents of imprisoned FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, made their television debut on CNN’s Smerconish this past weekend. Their central argument: their son’s criminal conviction lacks merit since FTX customers ultimately recovered their funds.
The appearance preceded a substantial FTX distribution event. Approximately $2.2 billion is scheduled for disbursement by the FTX Recovery Trust at month’s end in March. This payment will elevate total asset recoveries to around $10 billion.
However, a critical nuance went largely unaddressed by the parents during their interview. Every distribution is denominated in U.S. dollars and locked to asset valuations from November 2022, when the bankruptcy proceedings began. During that period, Bitcoin was valued at approximately $16,800.
Today, Bitcoin trades near $69,000. During its 2025 peak, the cryptocurrency surpassed $126,000.
Creditors who possessed one Bitcoin during FTX’s implosion will not receive one Bitcoin in return. Instead, they receive the 2022 dollar equivalent of that Bitcoin, supplemented with interest. The distinction represents a substantial difference in actual value.
Joseph Bankman also mounted a defense of the controversial fund transfers from FTX to Alameda Research, the affiliated trading entity. He characterized these movements as ordinary borrowing practices, drawing parallels to conventional market operations.
This position contradicts regulatory reforms implemented following FTX’s downfall. Jurisdictions including Hong Kong, the European Union, and pending U.S. legislative proposals now explicitly prohibit commingling customer deposits with proprietary trading operations. These regulatory frameworks emerged directly in response to the FTX scandal.
The family has actively lobbied for presidential clemency from Donald Trump. From his prison cell, SBF has maintained a presence on X, posting expressions of support for current White House policies.
During a January conversation with the New York Times, Trump explicitly ruled out pardoning Bankman-Fried. This stance stands in contrast to his clemency decisions for other cryptocurrency industry figures, such as Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht and former Binance chief executive Changpeng Zhao.
Current Polymarket odds place the likelihood of a pardon at just 12%.
SBF’s legal appeal continues to work through the court system. Federal prosecutors have rejected his allegations of political persecution, while his request for a new trial encounters sustained resistance.
The post SBF’s Parents Claim FTX Victims Were Made Whole — Creditors Say Otherwise appeared first on Blockonomi.


