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US government transferred $288 million in seized BTC and ETH to Coinbase Prime, sparking debate over Trump’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve rule and potential sale.
The U.S. government shifted roughly $288 million in seized Bitcoin and Ether onto Coinbase Prime on Monday, a move that revives scrutiny of President Donald Trump’s 2025 executive order barring the sale of Bitcoin held in the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve [1].
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Value transferred | $288 million (≈3,800 BTC + 30,000 ETH) |
| BTC portion | $235 million (≈3,800 BTC) |
| ETH portion | $53 million (≈30,000 ETH) |
| Catalyst | Transfer to Coinbase Prime custody platform |
Arkham’s on‑chain tracker shows the Bitcoin arrived via two fresh intermediary wallets before landing in a Coinbase Prime deposit address, while the Ether moved directly to the exchange’s custody wallet [1][3]. The Bitcoin originated from two high‑profile seizures: 2,875 BTC linked to Ryan Farace (“Xanaxman”) and 925.5 BTC tied to the defunct exchange BTC‑e. The Ether trace points to a wallet connected to Brian Krewson, an Oracle employee implicated in a $54 million laundering scheme [1][2].
These transfers represent only a fraction of the government’s overall crypto holdings, which total about $20.6 billion across 324,000 BTC, 28,000 ETH, and 146 million USDT [2][3]. A separate 140 BTC movement between Coinbase Prime addresses and a cold wallet suggests internal shuffling rather than an imminent sale [1].
The March 2025 executive order created a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and explicitly prohibited the sale of seized Bitcoin placed into that reserve [1][3]. However, the order applies only to coins that have completed the final forfeiture process. The assets moved on Monday stem from ongoing criminal cases, meaning they fall outside the “reserve” restriction [3]. Ethereum is not covered by the order at all, giving the Treasury broader discretion over its disposition [3].
Market participants often interpret large on‑chain transfers to exchanges as a precursor to liquidation, because most institutional holders keep assets in cold storage for security [3]. Nonetheless, Coinbase Prime also provides custody, financing, and trading services, so the deposits could simply reflect consolidation of seized assets for managed custody [2][3].
The $288 million transfer underscores a gap between the executive order’s intent and the practical handling of seized assets, leaving the market to monitor whether the government will eventually liquidate these holdings or keep them in custodial limbo.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 4 outlets · Jul 14, 2026 · How we report
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