Sam Bankman-Fried, the FTX co-founder serving a 25-year sentence, has reportedly told a fellow inmate he intends to launch a new crypto token once he walks free, a release that (absent legal relief) may not arrive until around 2044.
FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried Wants to Launch a New Token After Prison

Key Takeaways
A Token Pitch From Behind Bars
According to a New York Magazine feature, Bankman-Fried has been telling those around him that his crypto ambitions did not end with FTX’s implosion. Fellow inmate David Bunevacz recounted that SBF frequently spoke about needing tens of millions of dollars to build a business worth running. When pressed on his plans after release, the disgraced founder reportedly said he would start a token and that people would flock to it.
The confidence is striking, given Bankman-Fried was convicted in 2023 on seven counts of fraud and conspiracy tied to the roughly $11 billion collapse of FTX and its sister trading firm Alameda Research, one of the largest financial frauds in US history. Yet by the inmate’s account, the man at the center of it still treats a token launch as an obvious next step rather than a closed chapter.

The harder problem for any future SBF coin is timing, as Bankman-Fried is serving a 25-year sentence, and his bid for a new trial was denied in April 2026, when Judge Lewis Kaplan dismissed his fresh-evidence claims as baseless. His direct appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals remains active, but no ruling has overturned the verdict.
Earlier this month, his legal team formally filed a presidential pardon application with the U.S. Department of Justice, a move that briefly sent the defunct exchange’s FTT token up 50%. President Donald Trump has publicly declined to pardon him twice, citing the size of the fraud. Barring a successful appeal or executive clemency, SBF would not be freed until roughly 2044, making any token he eventually launches a story for the next decade, not this market cycle.
In a market like crypto, personality and narrative routinely outrun fundamentals, so even an offhand prison remark stands to carry weight, especially since the sector has spent two years processing FTX’s wreckage. Most recently, a Silicon Valley law firm settled FTX fraud claims for $54 million in a sign that the legal fallout is still unwinding.
Against that backdrop, the idea of an SBF-branded coin is not that far-fetched, especially since memecoin culture has repeatedly shown that a recognizable name (even an infamous one) can send a token soaring on hype alone, with little underlying utility. And, while traders who lost money on FTX may recoil at the notion, speculators chasing the next viral launch may not care.
For now, the talk is just that and Bankman-Fried controls no funds he can legally deploy. On top of that, he still faces years of appeals and remains barred from the industry he once dominated, but his remarks are a reminder that the FTX saga could be far from over and that its central figure still sees himself returning to the arena.

















