Why Are Senators Moving Against Clemency?

Sens. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., and Ruben Gallego, D-Ariz., introduced a Senate resolution urging President Donald Trump not to grant executive clemency to Sam Bankman-Fried, the jailed former FTX chief executive convicted over one of the largest fraud cases in crypto history.

The four-page resolution states that “under no circumstances should Samuel Bankman-Fried receive executive clemency,” placing both lawmakers in direct opposition to any possible pardon effort. The move comes as Trump has already pardoned several figures linked to the crypto industry, including dark web marketplace operator Ross Ulbricht and former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao.

Bankman-Fried ran crypto exchange FTX and founded Alameda Research. In November 2022, FTX filed for bankruptcy after it was revealed that customer assets had been used to support Alameda’s activities. A New York jury convicted Bankman-Fried in November 2023 on all seven counts related to defrauding FTX customers, lenders, and investors. Prosecutors described the case as likely the largest financial fraud of the past decade.

Lummis said the conviction and sentencing process should end any serious push for clemency. “He had his day in court,” she said. “A jury didn’t buy the act, and a judge gave him 25 years for a reason. Mr. Bankman-Fried can spend that time chasing clemency he hasn’t earned, or he can finally do something novel and take accountability, but I’m certainly not interested in helping him avoid responsibility.”

Why Does This Matter for Crypto Policy?

The resolution lands as Congress is still negotiating broader crypto market structure legislation. Lummis and Gallego have both been active in those talks, which aim to establish a comprehensive federal regulatory framework for digital assets for the first time.

That timing matters. The FTX collapse remains one of the central political references in Washington’s crypto debate. Supporters of new legislation argue that clearer rules could help prevent another major failure. Critics worry that a lighter regulatory framework could benefit the same industry that produced FTX, especially if high-profile offenders later receive political relief.

A Bankman-Fried pardon would therefore carry weight beyond one criminal case. It could reopen public anger over customer losses, complicate efforts to pass crypto legislation, and give opponents of industry-backed reforms a stronger argument that Washington is protecting insiders.

The resolution also shows that crypto policy is no longer divided only along party lines. Lummis is one of the Senate’s most prominent Republican supporters of digital asset legislation, while Gallego has pushed for stronger ethics provisions and limits around public officials’ crypto activity. Their joint opposition to clemency reflects a shared concern that the FTX case remains too damaging to be treated as a routine pardon matter.

Investor Takeaway

The resolution does not change Bankman-Fried’s sentence by itself, but it raises the political cost of clemency. For crypto investors and firms, the FTX case remains a regulatory overhang that can still affect legislation, enforcement priorities, and public trust in digital asset markets.

How Does Trump’s Crypto Pardon Record Change the Debate?

The senators’ move comes after Trump granted clemency to several crypto-linked figures over the past year. Those decisions have made any potential Bankman-Fried pardon more politically sensitive, even though Trump has said he has no plans to grant one.

Bankman-Fried has reportedly been seeking a pardon. He also lost an appeal last week after arguing that the original court did not give him a fair chance. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Senate resolution.

Bankman-Fried has also been active on X and GETTR, praising some of Trump’s actions, including the pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández. GETTR was founded by Jason Miller, a former senior adviser and spokesman for Trump.

Gallego framed the case as a matter of accountability for retail victims. “He took advantage of millions of Americans and stole their savings,” Gallego said. “Perhaps worst of all, he has shown no remorse for his crimes and has instead tried to laughably claim he is a victim of ‘lawfare.’ What a joke.”

What Are the Implications for Market Structure Talks?

The clemency fight adds pressure to an already difficult crypto legislative process. Lawmakers have been trying to advance market structure rules that would divide oversight between federal agencies, define digital asset categories, and give exchanges a clearer registration path.

One major sticking point has been ethics. Gallego has argued that any legislation should include provisions barring the president, vice president, senior federal officials, and their immediate family members from certain financial transactions involving digital assets.

Those concerns have grown as Trump and his family’s crypto ventures have become part of the broader policy debate. For Democrats, ethics rules are a condition for moving forward. For Republicans and industry advocates, added restrictions could complicate negotiations or slow a bill that many firms see as overdue.

The Bankman-Fried resolution places that debate in sharper terms. It separates support for crypto legislation from support for leniency toward convicted industry executives. For lawmakers trying to pass a regulatory framework, that distinction may be necessary to preserve political support.

For the market, the message is clear: crypto firms may be closer to federal legislation, but the industry’s political liabilities have not disappeared. FTX remains the clearest example of why lawmakers want investor protections, ethical guardrails, and visible accountability before giving the sector a more permanent place in the U.S. financial system.