The fallen crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried, currently serving a 25-year sentence for fraud and money laundering, has petitioned the Trump administration for a presidential pardon. His legal team argues that the sentence is excessive and that his cooperation with authorities should have been rewarded. However, the City of London, the financial heart of the United Kingdom, has issued a stark warning: such a pardon would set a dangerous precedent for international financial crime.
The case, which saw the collapse of FTX and the loss of billions in customer funds, has become a symbol of the risks inherent in unregulated digital finance. A pardon, critics argue, would undermine global efforts to hold white-collar criminals accountable and could embolden future fraudsters. Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried's supporters, including some libertarian tech billionaires, claim he was a scapegoat for a system that lacked clear rules.
The intersection of US politics and crypto justice is now under the microscope, with the Bank of England reportedly monitoring the situation closely. As quantum computing advances and new digital rails emerge, the debate over forgiveness versus deterrence in the crypto age is only beginning.









