Why Did U.S. Government-Linked Wallets Move Crypto to Coinbase?
Blockchain wallets linked to the U.S. government transferred more than $288 million worth of bitcoin and ether to Coinbase Prime on Monday, placing seized assets tied to criminal cases inside an institutional exchange and custody environment. Onchain data showed the wallets moved about 3,800.5 BTC and 30,007 ETH across multiple transactions. The assets originated from seizures and confiscations tied to law enforcement cases, including wallets labeled by Arkham Intelligence under the names Ryan Farace, Brian Krewson, and the defunct BTC-e exchange. The transfers drew attention because exchange-linked movements are often viewed as a possible step before a sale, conversion, or operational restructuring. That does not mean a sale is confirmed. Coinbase Prime serves institutional clients with custody, trading, financing, and related crypto services, meaning the assets could have been moved for custody management, staging, internal administration, or future execution. The timing is still sensitive. A March 2025 executive order from President Donald Trump directed seized bitcoin into the country’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and instructed federal agencies to stop selling seized assets. That makes any transfer of government-held bitcoin to an exchange venue more closely watched by traders, compliance teams, and market analysts.Which Seized Assets Were Involved?
The largest bitcoin movement was tied to the Ryan Farace case. A government-linked wallet associated with Farace, who was convicted of selling counterfeit Xanax pills on dark web marketplaces, sent 2,875 BTC worth roughly $178 million to a new address. That address then forwarded the full amount to a Coinbase Prime deposit wallet minutes later. A second wallet linked to BTC-e, the defunct unlicensed exchange that was shut down in 2017 after reportedly processing billions in illicit funds, sent 925.512 BTC worth about $57 million through a similar route. The bitcoin moved from the seizure address to an intermediary wallet and then on to Coinbase Prime. Both intermediary wallets were emptied after the transfers. The ether movement followed a cleaner path. A wallet connected to Brian Krewson sent 30,007 ETH worth about $53.09 million directly to a Coinbase Prime deposit address. Krewson was allegedly involved in storing and laundering $54 million in crypto proceeds tied to narcotics trafficking. Separately, 140.214 BTC moved between government Coinbase Prime addresses and a Coinbase cold wallet, indicating internal shuffling rather than a clear transfer out of government-linked custody.Investor Takeaway
The transfers are large enough to attract market attention but small relative to total U.S. government-linked crypto holdings. The main issue is not immediate supply pressure alone; it is whether future seized-asset handling will match the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve policy.


