The findings explained how seized or seizable assets could influence emerging national crypto reserve strategies, including the US government’s proposed Strategic Bitcoin Reserve. Meanwhile, in Massachusetts, a bill to establish a state-level Bitcoin reserve received little enthusiasm during its first 0 bipartisan advocacy and successful examples from states like Texas and Arizona, political divisions and regulatory hesitation are still slowing progress on state-driven digital asset reserve 1 Crime May Fuel State Reserves Governments around the world may already be sitting on tens of billions of dollars in potentially recoverable digital assets, according to new research from 2 blockchain analytics firm’s latest report suggests that as the United States and other nations consider establishing national cryptocurrency reserves, seized or seizable on-chain assets could play a big role in shaping those 3 estimates that crypto wallets linked to illicit activity collectively hold more than $75 billion worth of digital 4 that amount, around $15 billion is held directly by known illicit entities, while another $60 billion resides in wallets that are indirectly exposed to those 5 entity balances & assets held on-chain () The report also found that darknet market operators and vendors control more than $40 billion in 6 three-quarters of the total illicit value is held in Bitcoin, though stablecoins are becoming more common in illicit 7 findings arrive as the US government explores ways to build a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and Digital Asset Stockpile under the Trump administration’s 8 initiatives are designed to grow federal crypto holdings through budget-neutral methods like asset forfeiture, which could potentially align enforcement efforts with fiscal policy 9 co-founder and CEO Jonathan Levin told Bloomberg that the report’s findings “raise asset forfeiture potential to a completely different level,” as these discoveries could shift how governments see cryptocurrency in both regulatory and strategic 10 law enforcement actions prove that there is at least somewhat of a growing intersection between digital assets and national 11 authorities recently seized roughly $40 million in crypto from TradeOgre, a platform that was accused of operating without proper registration and enabling money 12 move sparked backlash from parts of the crypto community, who argued that regulators 13 headlines about hacks and illicit markets, the share of criminal activity in the broader crypto economy is still 14 found that only 0.14% of all blockchain transactions in 2024 were linked to illegal activity — far below the estimated 2%–5% of global GDP laundered through traditional financial 15 Cool on Bitcoin Bill Meanwhile, a bill proposing the creation of a Bitcoin strategic reserve in Massachusetts met a very muted response after its first legislative hearing in eight 16 proposal was introduced by state Senator Peter Durant, and it seeks to allow the state treasury to allocate up to 10% of the Commonwealth Stabilization Fund toward Bitcoin and other digital assets, while also adding any crypto seized by state authorities to the 17 a hearing of the Joint Committee on Revenue, Durant shared details about the bill’s structure and explained that it would act as a “prudent diversification tool” providing transparency, oversight, and risk management without imposing any immediate mandates.
However, after his presentation, the committee offered no questions or comments, which leaves some uncertainty over the bill’s 18 Peter Durant The state’s legislature is currently dominated by 19 means that Durant, a Republican, could face an uphill battle to gain traction for the 20 said that discussions with fellow lawmakers have been constructive and that he is still optimistic about educating legislators on Bitcoin’s potential 21 committee now has 60 days from the hearing date to either advance the measure or send it for further review, which suggests the next update could come by early 22 Porter, CEO of the Satoshi Action Fund, also testified in support of the bill by framing it as part of a bipartisan movement across US states to establish Bitcoin and digital asset 23 described Massachusetts as uniquely positioned to lead due to its long history of financial innovation, and the state’s role in pioneering America’s first mutual 24 Massachusetts proposal follows similar initiatives across the United 25 like Texas, Arizona, and New Hampshire already enacted laws to create digital asset reserves, while others — including Wyoming, South Dakota, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Montana — delayed or rejected such 26 the mixed reactions, supporters believe the growing national attention to digital asset reserves, including federal initiatives under President Trump’s executive order, could eventually drive more states to follow suit.
Story Tags

Latest news and analysis from Coinpaper