Quick Summary
- Federal authorities transferred approximately $606,000 in Bitcoin (8 BTC) associated with the 2016 Bitfinex breach to Coinbase Prime
- The cryptocurrency originated from Ilya Lichtenstein’s theft of 119,756 BTC from Bitfinex in 2016, valued at approximately $72M during the incident
- Legal statutes mandate that recovered Bitcoin must be returned directly to Bitfinex rather than liquidated for Treasury Department funds
- Bitfinex intends to utilize recovered assets to redeem Recovery Right Tokens and execute LEO token burn operations
- Federal cryptocurrency holdings currently include 328,361 BTC worth approximately $24 billion
On Thursday, federal authorities executed a transfer of approximately $606,000 in Bitcoin to Coinbase Prime. Blockchain records verified the movement of 8 BTC, with forensic analysis tracing the assets to the 2016 Bitfinex security breach.
Arkham, an on-chain analytics platform, identified and reported the transfer, establishing a clear connection to Ilya Lichtenstein, the individual responsible for executing one of cryptocurrency’s most significant early exchange compromises.
Exchange-bound transfers typically generate speculation regarding possible liquidations. However, existing legal frameworks mandate that federal authorities must restore these assets directly to Bitfinex rather than convert them to fiat currency.
This transaction represents the third in a series, following previous government wallet activities on March 3 and April 10, each associated with distinct cryptocurrency enforcement actions.
On August 2, 2016, Lichtenstein identified and exploited weaknesses in Bitfinex’s multi-signature wallet infrastructure. Through fraudulent authorization, he executed more than 2,000 transactions, redirecting 119,756 Bitcoin to addresses under his control.
The stolen Bitcoin represented approximately $72 million in value at the moment of the breach. With current valuations hovering near $74,000 per coin, that identical quantity would now equal roughly $8.9 billion.
Following the theft, Lichtenstein and his spouse, Heather Morgan, engaged in extensive laundering operations spanning more than five years. Their methods included crypto mixing services, darknet marketplace transactions, cross-chain transfers, and physical gold acquisitions.
During February 2022, FBI investigators successfully decrypted files maintained in Lichtenstein’s cloud storage infrastructure. The recovered data included a spreadsheet documenting more than 2,000 private keys, providing law enforcement with access to virtually all stolen assets. Officials recovered approximately 94,636 Bitcoin, representing $3.6 billion at that time.
Distribution Plans for Recovered Cryptocurrency
Early in 2025, federal court proceedings established that recovered assets must be returned to Bitfinex as cryptocurrency. Liquidation followed by monetary transfers to the U.S. Treasury Department is prohibited under applicable law.
Bitfinex has established detailed allocation strategies for returned assets. The exchange plans to completely redeem all outstanding Recovery Right Tokens, which function as digital claims distributed to users affected by the security incident.
A minimum of 80% of any surplus net proceeds will fund repurchase and burn operations for its UNUS SED LEO token, maintaining alignment with original whitepaper provisions.
Lichtenstein received a five-year federal prison sentence in November 2024. Morgan was sentenced to 18 months.
Federal Cryptocurrency Portfolio
Lichtenstein gained release in January 2026 through First Step Act provisions. He publicly expressed gratitude to President Donald Trump via X platform following his release.
Federal authorities currently maintain custody of 328,361 Bitcoin distributed across government wallets, representing approximately $24 billion in value. Additional holdings include roughly $146 million in Ethereum alongside various alternative cryptocurrencies.
Government officials announced last year that recovered Bitcoin holdings would contribute to establishing a national strategic Bitcoin reserve.

