SBF sent to solitary confinement over Tucker Carlson interview: Report


Former FTX CEO Sam “SBF” Bankman-Fried has reportedly been despatched to solitary confinement after participating in an interview with right-wing political commentator Tucker Carlson, which was not permitted by jail authorities.

“This explicit interview was not permitted,” a consultant for the Bureau of Prisons told The New York Occasions on March 7.

Bankman-Fried didn’t obtain permission to take interview

In keeping with an individual briefed on the scenario, after Bankman-Fried’s interview with Carlson was printed, he was despatched to solitary confinement at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Heart, the place he has been held since August 2023. 

United States, Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX

Supply: Andre Cronje

The US Bureau of Prisons is claimed to have strict guidelines on who can talk with inmates and the way they’ll accomplish that.

The interview, printed on Carlson’s YouTube channel on March 6, has garnered 730,425 views on the time of publication.

United States, Sam Bankman-Fried, FTX

Supply: Tucker Carlson

Through the interview with Carlson, Bankman-Fried talked about prison life since his sentencing and his ideas on crypto regulation within the US.

Bankman-Fried advised Carlson he didn’t suppose he was “a felony.”

Bankman-Fried continues enchantment battle

Whereas Carlson didn’t straight ask Bankman-Fried if he anticipated a pardon from US President Donald Trump, he appeared receptive to some Republican concepts throughout the interview.

Associated: SBF always played both sides of the aisle despite new Republican plea

In keeping with Bankman-Fried, he didn’t name on any US lawmakers to help him in 2022 amid pending felony expenses, claiming that he “didn’t wish to do one thing inappropriate.”

In September 2024, legal professionals representing Bankman-Fried filed an appeal for his seven felony counts and 25-year jail sentence.

Within the 102-page temporary, the legal professionals claimed that the previous FTX CEO was “by no means presumed harmless,” topic to scrutiny that allegedly affected prosecutors, the presiding decide, and therapy by the media.

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