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The United States transferred seized bitcoins to a Coinbase Prime address. The important point is not the amount, modest in market terms. The real signal is that Washington is increasingly treating confiscated bitcoin as an asset to be organized, stored, and integrated into a broader public strategy.
The movement spotted involves about 2,438 BTC, nearly 177,000 dollars according to data shared about the operation. The funds reportedly come from a seizure related to Glenn Olivio and were sent to Coinbase Prime, an infrastructure often used for institutional custody.
Taken alone, this transfer changes nothing. However, it confirms a mechanism already apparent for several months: US authorities no longer let these assets sit in scattered wallets. They reorganize, centralize, and place them in a more transparent custody circuit.
The government does not announce a regular market purchase, but it does expand the stock of bitcoins it controls and can now manage as a strategic reserve. In fact, seized bitcoin ceases to be a mere judicial loot. It becomes a state asset.
The turning point was officialized on March 6, 2025. On that day, the White House created by decree a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve as well as a separate stockpile for other digital assets. The text specifies that government BTC deposited in this reserve must not be sold.
Another decisive detail: this reserve must be supplied by bitcoins already held by the Treasury after criminal or civil confiscation. The decree also authorizes the Treasury and Commerce to study additional acquisition strategies, provided they remain neutral for the American taxpayer.
In other words, Washington is changing stance. For years, seized bitcoins often ended up being sold. Now, the official logic rests on retention. This changes the interpretation of every on-chain transfer: a transfer to Coinbase no longer automatically signals an upcoming sale. It can just as well announce integration into a custody system aligned with the reserve.
The estimates reported on April 11, 2026 place US holdings around 328,372 BTC, or more than 22 billion dollars at the current price. This total makes the United States the largest known state holder of bitcoin.
The exact amount may vary slightly with market price and with the identification of public addresses. But the trend does not change: the United States is stacking a mass of Bitcoin no other state currently controls at this scale. The subject is therefore no longer just minor judicial news. It enters the realm of monetary and geopolitical strategy.
It is also worth noting a point often overlooked. This reserve is built without massive announced purchases on the spot market. It grows first through seizures, confiscations, and accounting centralization. It is a less spectacular path than a large public buying plan. But politically, it allows Washington to accumulate bitcoin while avoiding the image of direct speculation with taxpayers’ money.
For the market, this type of transfer remains too small to cause an immediate shock. However, it fuels a deeper conviction: bitcoin is gradually settling into the strategic architecture of states. This idea still seemed theoretical not long ago. It is now administrative, legal, and traceable on the blockchain.