The parents of Sam Bankman-Fried, Barbara Fried and Joseph Bankman, made headlines over the weekend with their first televised interview on CNN’s Smerconish, where they asserted that customers of the embattled cryptocurrency exchange FTX were fully repaid and that their son’s conviction is unjust.
According to the couple, they contend that all FTX creditors were compensated, with interest, following the exchange’s monumental collapse. Joseph Bankman emphatically stated, “The money was always there. These were very profitable companies with billions of extra assets.” However, this narrative is being met with increasing skepticism from those affected.
The timing of their interview coincides with the FTX Recovery Trust’s impending distribution of approximately $2.2 billion, expected to be completed by late March. This payout will boost total recoveries to around $10 billion, a figure touted by Bankman as a sign of successful recovery efforts.
In the discussion, they highlighted that certain classes of U.S. customers could receive as much as 120% of what they initially lost, indicating a generous return given the circumstances. “Everybody has been made whole with 18 to 43 percent interest,” Barbara Fried stated.
However, critical details were notably absent from their assertions. The payouts distributed from the FTX Recovery Trust are determined based on dollar values fixed at the time of the bankruptcy filing in November 2022, when Bitcoin was trading near $16,800. Presently, Bitcoin is valued at around $69,000, with peaks hitting as high as $126,000 in late 2025.
This means that a creditor who held one Bitcoin during the collapse will receive compensation equal to its 2022 dollar valuation—not the current high they could have realized had they retained their assets. This differentiation is significant and raises questions about the true sufficiency of the recovery process.
Sunil Kavuri, a representative for FTX creditors, voiced strong disagreement, stating plainly, “FTX creditors are not whole.” His assessment suggests that while efforts to repay are underway, many creditors feel that they remain substantially shortchanged.
In a further attempt to defend her son’s actions, Joseph Bankman described the transfer of customer funds to Alameda Research—the trading firm linked to FTX—as ordinary borrowing practice, drawing parallels to typical market activity. This justification stands counter to regulations enacted in the wake of FTX’s fallout, which now prohibit the mingling of customer funds with trading capital across jurisdictions like the European Union and Hong Kong.
Barbara Fried went on to label the prosecution as politically motivated, accusing the current administration of orchestrating a campaign against crypto. Their family has been actively seeking a presidential pardon from Donald Trump, despite Trump’s recent statements suggesting he will not be granting clemency to Sam Bankman-Fried. Current market predictions place the chances of a pardon at a mere 12% according to Polymarket.
As legal proceedings unfold, SBF’s appeal continues while prosecutors have dismissed claims of political bias. As creditors and the general public dissect the realities surrounding the FTX collapse and recovery efforts, the contrasting narratives presented by the Bankman family and those impacted remain a stark reminder of the complexities involved in the battle for justice and restitution in the cryptocurrency sector.
