Former FTX CEO Sam “SBF” Bankman-Fried has reportedly been sent to solitary confinement after taking part in an interview with right-wing political commentator Tucker Carlson, which was not approved by prison authorities.

“This particular interview was not approved,” a representative for the US Bureau of Prisons told The New York Times on March 7.

Bankman-Fried did not receive permission to take interview

According to a person briefed on the situation, after Bankman-Fried’s interview with Carlson was published, he was sent to solitary confinement at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center, where he has been held since August 2023. 

United States, Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX

Source: Andre Cronje

The Bureau of Prisons is said to have strict rules on who can communicate with inmates and how they can do so.

Advertisement

Get $25 in BTC when you trade $100+ on Gemini – sign up and start earning today!

The interview, published on Carlson’s YouTube channel on March 6, has already garnered 730,425 views at the time of publication.

United States, Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX

Source: Tucker Carlson

During the interview with Carlson, Bankman-Fried talked about prison life since his sentencing and his thoughts on crypto regulation in the US.

Bankman-Fried told Carlson he didn’t think he was “a criminal.”

Bankman-Fried continues appeal battle

While Carlson didn’t directly ask Bankman-Fried if he expected a pardon from US President Donald Trump, he appeared receptive to some Republican ideas during the interview.

However, since the interview aired, speculation has grown within the community about a possible Trump pardon.

According to a March 7 X post from crypto predictions platform Polymarket, “the odds of an SBF pardon have nearly doubled,” since the interview was published.

Related: SBF always played both sides of the aisle despite new Republican plea

On Jan. 21, just a day after taking office, Trump gave a full pardon to Ross Ulbricht, who had been in prison for 12 years for founding the defunct darknet marketplace the Silk Road.

Meanwhile, in September 2024, lawyers representing Bankman-Fried filed an appeal for his seven felony counts and 25-year prison sentence.

In the 102-page brief, the lawyers claimed that the former FTX CEO was “never presumed innocent,” subject to scrutiny that allegedly affected prosecutors, the presiding judge, and treatment by the media.

Magazine: Meet lawyer Max Burwick — ‘The ambulance chaser of crypto’