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US Government Moves Bitcoin Tied to $9 Billion Bitfinex Hack

By Logan Hitchcock · Published April 17, 2026 · 3 min read · Source: Decrypt
BitcoinRegulationBlockchainSecurity
US Government Moves Bitcoin Tied to $9 Billion Bitfinex Hack
NewsLaw and Order

US Government Moves Bitcoin Tied to $9 Billion Bitfinex Hack

The U.S. government moved 8.2 Bitcoin, or greater than $600,000, that is linked to the $9 billion Bitfinex hack from 2016.

Logan HitchcockBy Logan HitchcockEdited by Andrew HaywardApr 17, 2026Apr 17, 20262 min read
Bitcoin and the U.S. Source: Decrypt/Shutterstock
Bitcoin and the U.S. Source: Decrypt/Shutterstock
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In brief

Bitcoin holdings linked to the $9 billion hack of crypto exchange Bitfinex in 2016 was on the move Thursday, as addresses connected to the U.S. government transferred around 8.2 BTC to Coinbase Prime, according to data from Arkham Intelligence

The coins, now valued around $628,000, last moved 2 years ago when a different U.S. government address transferred them to the wallet that was labeled by Arkham as “Bitfinex hacker seized funds.”

A representative for the Department of Justice did not immediately respond to Decrypt’s request for comment seeking confirmation about the coins’ connection to Bitfinex or why the funds may have been moved. 

When crypto assets are moved to an exchange, it is often viewed as the precursor to a sale. However, the government’s intentions for the recently transferred BTC remain unknown at this time. 

The transferred Bitcoin represents just a small fraction of the more than 94,000 Bitcoin seized by the U.S. government as part of its investigation and arrest of Ilya Lichtenstein and partner Heather “Razzlekhan” Morgan for their roles related to the hack and subsequent laundering of stolen funds. Those seized funds are worth more than $7.2 billion now. 

Lichtenstein, the theft’s orchestrator, exploited a security vulnerability on the crypto exchange that led to the heist of 119,754 BTC—or $9.18 billion worth at today’s prices. Arrested in 2022 on conspiracy to commit money laundering, he later pleaded guilty to the charges in 2023. He was sentenced to five years in prison for money laundering in 2024.

Morgan, Lichtenstein's wife and also a rapper, was hit with money laundering charges and later sentenced to 18 months in federal prison.

Prior to sentencing, the pair reached a plea deal with prosecutors in 2023, agreeing to forfeit all the remaining proceeds from the nearly 120,000 BTC that was taken from the exchange. 

Lichtenstein and Morgan were both recently released from prison, crediting President Trump for their early release despite there being no official reported action from the president to commute the sentences. 

“I want to give a shoutout to Papa Trump for making my 18-month sentence shorter,” Morgan said at the time. “So razzle-fucking-dazzle.”

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