The US Government transferred 8.2 BTC seized from Bitfinex hacker Ilya Lichtenstein to Coinbase Prime. Is a government Bitcoin sell-off next?
The US Marshals Service quietly moved 8.2 Bitcoin to Coinbase Prime.

The transfer, worth roughly $606,000, raised immediate questions across the crypto community.
Blockchain intelligence firm Arkham flagged the transaction on X.
The Bitcoin traces back to Ilya Lichtenstein, convicted in the high-profile Bitfinex hack. No confirmed sale has followed the transfer yet.
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Arkham posted on X, calling it a potential government Bitcoin sell-off.
However, critics quickly pointed out a flaw in that framing. The firm’s own post ended with the question, “Will they sell?” That single word undercut its bold opening claim significantly.
Transferring Bitcoin to an exchange does not automatically mean a sale is happening.
The US Marshals Service has worked with Coinbase since 2024. Coinbase Prime handles both custody and trading for the government.
Blockchain trackers confirmed the wallets involved in the transfer. The move fits a pattern of routine asset management, not a sudden liquidation.
The US government currently holds over 200,000 BTC in seized assets. Moving 8.2 BTC represents a tiny fraction of that total.
Bitcoin’s price barely reacted, holding just under $75,000. Markets treated the transfer as standard government procedure, not a signal.
The post spread fast, with accounts adding their own layers.
Market observer Crypto Jargon on X called it coordinated selling pressure from sovereign states. They pointed to Bhutan’s government also moving Bitcoin around the same time.
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That framing suggested two nations were dumping supply into a nervous market simultaneously.
Crypto Jargon warned of fresh sell walls forming on Coinbase while retail traders were already uncertain. They suggested governments signaling a willingness to cash out instead of holding long-term.
They also raised concerns about a potential cascade if more state-level Bitcoin followed. The post framed it as a direct counter to the “institutions are buying” narrative.
Those claims, though attention-grabbing, lacked hard evidence of coordinated action. No data confirmed that Bhutan and the US were acting together.
Bitcoin stayed relatively calm throughout the news cycle.
Per CoinGecko data at the time, BTC traded at $74,847, down just 0.13% in 24 hours. The seven-day performance still showed a 3.85% gain. The market absorbed the news without a sharp reaction in either direction.
Trader positioning data told a different story from the fear-driven social media posts.
According to Ali Charts, most Bitcoin traders were leaning bullish that week. A rally to $75,300 wiped out $80 million in short positions before the transfer news broke. That move cleared overhead resistance and shifted sentiment toward the long side.
Key liquidity clusters sat below the market at $70,000, $65,000, and $57,000. Those levels could act as magnets for leveraged longs if a flush happened.
Traders were watching for a reset before any sustained relief rally. The government transfer did not appear to shift those technical setups meaningfully.
The post US Government Transfers $606K Bitcoin Seized From Bitfinex Hack to Coinbase: Sell-off Incoming? appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.


