US Moves $288M in Seized Crypto to Coinbase
What Actually Happened
The government did not announce the move. It happened over about half a day on Monday, and blockchain tracking firm Arkham caught it.
So why move it? No one outside the government knows for sure. Tim Sun, a senior researcher at crypto exchange HashKey, said it could be “in preparation for a sale or simply for the consolidation and custody of seized assets.” He also called it “a signal for a potential sell-off.”
Where the Crypto Came From
The Bitcoin traces back to two places. One source is a dark-web dealer named Ryan Farace, who went by “Xanaxman.” The other is BTC-e, a defunct exchange that the government has been untangling for years.
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The Ethereum is linked to a case against Brian Krewson, an Oracle employee. The amount tied to that money-laundering case is $54 million – close to the $53 million worth of Ethereum that moved.
The government’s crypto wallet is still stuffed. Arkham says U.S. government wallets hold roughly $20.6 billion in total, with 324,552 Bitcoin. That is a lot of potential selling pressure if the government ever decides to dump it.
The Bigger Picture
President Donald Trump signed an executive order in March 2025 creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. The order said those assets “shall not be sold.” But the reserve is not law yet. Legislation that would keep Bitcoin locked away for two decades has faced delays, while disagreements persist between the Treasury and Commerce departments over who actually controls the stash.
Sun pointed out that “the market needs to distinguish between Bitcoin held in the reserve and the U.S. government’s broader balance-sheet holdings.” The seized crypto that just moved is not part of the reserve – it is just forfeited property the government manages. That means the government may have “greater freedom of disposal” with it, Sun said.
What It Means for Your Portfolio
The market barely blinked. Ethereum actually went up 1.10% on the day. Bitcoin dipped 0.28%. A price move like that is basically a shrug.
But the long game matters more. If this transfer was a test run for selling, more large moves could follow. That would add supply to the market and could push prices down.
On the other hand, if Congress ever passes those bills and locks up the Bitcoin reserve for 20 years, a huge chunk of government-held crypto would be taken off the table. That would remove a lot of uncertainty.
For now, keep an eye on Coinbase Prime. If you see another big transfer, you will know the government is doing something. Whether it is selling or just organizing its digital closet – that is the question investors have to watch.
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