US Government Transfers $606,000 in Bitcoin Linked to 2016 Bitfinex Hack to Coinbase

The US government has once again made a notable move on the blockchain, transferring approximately $606,000 worth of bitcoin to Coinbase Prime. The transferred 8 BTC are linked to Ilya Lichtenstein, the mastermind behind the decade-old Bitfinex hack, as indicated by on-chain data tracked by Arkham. While transfers to exchanges can sometimes signal potential selling pressure, they can also be attributed to routine wallet movements or other non-selling activities. The bitcoin tied to the Bitfinex hack has a court-mandated destination, and it is not the US Treasury. Following federal proceedings in early 2025, the government was required to return the seized assets to Bitfinex in-kind, rather than liquidating them independently. Bitfinex intends to use the returned funds to fully redeem all outstanding Recovery Right Tokens, which are digital claims issued to customers who suffered losses in the hack, and allocate at least 80% of the remaining net proceeds to repurchase and burn its UNUS SED LEO token. The 2016 hack involved Lichtenstein hacking into Bitfinex and fraudulently authorizing over 2,000 transactions, transferring 119,756 BTC to a wallet under his control, which was worth roughly $72 million at the time. The exploit was followed by years of sophisticated money laundering via crypto mixers, darknets, and chain-hopping between coins, as well as the purchase of gold. In 2022, investigators seized a portion of the stolen BTC, then worth $3.6 billion, and in 2024, Lichtenstein was sentenced to 60 months in federal prison. The stolen coins, however, remained in government custody, with the US stating last year that its holdings of seized BTC would form part of a national strategic bitcoin reserve, currently valued at approximately $24.54 billion.