Key Highlights
- Prosecutors say a letter supporting SBF’s retrial motion shipped from Palo Alto/Menlo Park, not Terminal Island prison as claimed. The envelope used only a typed “/s/” signature.
- Federal inmates cannot use FedEx for outgoing mail; official channels are required. The private carrier and Bay Area origin cast doubt on the letter’s authenticity.
- Comes after Judge Kaplan rebuked SBF’s mother for improper filings and follows prosecutors calling his Rule 33 motion “incoherent” and recycled—further hurting his chances while serving 25 years.
Federal prosecutors in Manhattan moved swiftly Monday to undermine a key filing in Sam Bankman-Fried’s pro se push for a new trial, telling U.S. District Judge Lewis Kaplan that a letter purportedly sent by the imprisoned FTX founder actually originated in the Silicon Valley area rather than his federal detention facility.
The document, FedExed to the Southern District of New York court, claimed to come from the Metropolitan Detention Center in San Pedro, California. But its tracking information presented by the U.S. Attorney’s Office showed the package shipped from Palo Alto and Menlo Park—locations tied to Bankman-Fried’s pre-arrest life, family connections and Stanford roots.
The envelope bore Bankman-Fried’s name at “Terminal Island,” the low-security federal prison in San Pedro where he is currently housed following transfers, yet it carried only a typed “/s/” signature instead of a handwritten one. Inmates typically cannot use private couriers like FedEx for outgoing mail, prosecutors pointed out, citing Bureau of Prisons protocols that route correspondence through official channels.
Highlighted by Inner City Press on X, the challenge arrived late Monday as Bankman-Fried’s March 19 motion for retrial—already viewed skeptically—faces mounting hurdles. The letter was meant to support his request for more time to reply to the government’s opposition.
Family interventions and judicial rebuffs
The controversy follows repeated rebuffs from Kaplan. In recent weeks, the judge sharply rebuked Bankman-Fried’s mother, Barbara Fried, a retired Stanford Law professor specializing in legal ethics, for submitting unsolicited letters and reportedly leaving voicemails on chambers’ lines urging extensions on her son’s behalf. Citing her son’s limited prison access to word processors, files and an anticipated transfer, Fried pressed for leniency.
Kaplan responded firmly on March 16: Fried “is not a member of the Bar of this Court,” lacks standing to seek relief, and the court “does not accept calls from litigants or from members of their families.” Still, he extended the reply deadline to March 23 on his own motion.
Bankman-Fried, serving 25 years after his November 2023 conviction on seven counts of fraud, conspiracy and related charges tied to FTX’s 2022 collapse, filed the retrial motion himself in February under Rule 33. He claimed newly discovered evidence, prosecutorial misconduct—including alleged witness intimidation—and judicial bias.
Prosecutors fired back March 11, calling the arguments “recycled,” “incoherent” and a “transparent attempt” to relitigate settled issues about FTX’s solvency and customer losses.
The motion’s timing overlapped with family involvement that drew Kaplan’s ire, and now the authenticity of this latest pro se submission is under fire. Prosecutors did not outright accuse forgery but highlighted the geographic mismatch, signature anomaly and shipping method as reasons to question its legitimacy. They deferred to the court on any further extension but underscored the irregularities.
Bankman-Fried’s broader appellate fight continues in the Second Circuit, where he has argued Kaplan showed bias and should recuse. The retrial bid, already on thin ice under Rule 33’s strict standards for newly discovered evidence, now carries added doubt. No ruling has come on the challenged letter or the motion itself.
The episode highlights the steep climb for Bankman-Fried, once crypto’s golden boy, whose empire imploded in November 2022 when customer withdrawal demands exposed an $8 billion hole. Billions in restitution remain unresolved in the parallel bankruptcy proceedings, even as his criminal appeals grind forward. er, but the development adds fresh doubt to his prospects before Kaplan or on appeal.
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