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Trump White House Confirms: Forfeited Samourai Wallet Bitcoin Were Never Sold

Trump White House Confirms: Forfeited Samourai Wallet Bitcoin Were Never Sold

Published:
2026-01-16 22:35:52
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Trump White House confirms forfeited Samourai Wallet BTC were never sold

The Trump administration just dropped a bombshell about seized crypto assets—and it reveals a stunning shift in how governments view digital gold.

The Non-Sale That Speaks Volumes

Forfeited Bitcoin from the infamous Samourai Wallet case? Still sitting in Treasury coffers. Not a single satoshi hit the open market. That’s the official word from the White House, confirming what crypto advocates have long suspected: when it comes to top-tier digital assets, even the Feds think HODLing beats dumping.

From Confiscation to Cold Storage

This isn’t just procedural foot-dragging. It’s a tacit admission of Bitcoin’s hardened store-of-value status. Auctioning seized art or real estate is standard practice. Holding seized crypto indefinitely? That’s a policy choice with a bullish subtext—one that treats Bitcoin more like a strategic reserve asset than contraband. A far cry from the ‘sell it all’ panic you’d see from a traditional finance desk facing volatility.

The New Government Playbook

The move signals a maturation in state-level crypto strategy. Confiscation used to mean immediate liquidation, often destabilizing markets. Now, it looks like calculated accumulation. They’re not just seizing code; they’re banking on its long-term appreciation. It’s the ultimate irony: law enforcement becoming a forced, long-term Bitcoin believer.

So, while Wall Street quibbles over ETFs and basis points, the real institutional adoption might just be happening in the most unexpected vault of all—the one owned by the U.S. government. Talk about a plot twist even the cynics didn’t see coming.

Did the SDNY violate Presidential orders?

Cryptopolitan reported earlier this month that the U.S. Marshals Service (USMS) had sold approximately $6.3 million worth of Bitcoin. The bitcoin was handed over by Samourai Wallet developers Keonne Rodriguez and William Lonergan Hill as part of a guilty plea. 

On November 3 last year, on-chain data recorded a transfer of the seized 57.55353033 BTC from a government-controlled address (bc1q4pntkz06z7xxvdcers09cyjqz5gf8ut4pua22r) to a Coinbase Prime deposit address.

The Coinbase address soon showed a zero balance, causing many analysts to believe that the assets had been sold for cash, directly violating Executive Order 14233, signed by President TRUMP in March 2025. 

The order specifically mandates that any “Government BTC” acquired through criminal or civil forfeiture “shall not be sold” and must instead be held in the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR).

Patrick Witt, the Executive Director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, took to X (formerly Twitter) to clarify the situation. 

“We have received confirmation from (the) DOJ that the digital assets forfeited by Samourai Wallet have not been liquidated and will not be liquidated, per EO 14233. They will remain on the USG balance sheet as part of the SBR,” he said. 

Will the SDNY continue to defy the White House?

Despite Todd Blanche’s memo from May 2025 that instructed the DOJ to only go after cases where there’s evidence of “knowing and willful” criminal intent by the developers themselves, the SDNY went ahead to successfully secure convictions for Roman Storm, a co-founder of Tornado Cash. In August 2025, a jury found him guilty of conspiring to operate an unlicensed money-transmitting business.

The SDNY also sentenced Rodriguez and Hill in November 2025 to five and four years in prison, respectively. President Trump told reporters in December last year that he is “looking into” a pardon for Rodriguez.

Tim Scott, the Senate Banking Committee Chair, was forced to postpone a high-profile hearing for the CLARITY Act after Coinbase’s CEO, Brian Armstrong, announced on social media that he WOULD no longer be supporting the current draft. 

Armstrong said he is concerned that the bill gives too much authority to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over stablecoins and DeFi protocols. 

And without the backing of the largest U.S. crypto exchange, the bipartisan consensus led by Senator Cynthia Lummis has begun to fracture. Despite this, she has so far stated that lawmakers are “closer than ever” to a final deal. 

The current draft of the CLARITY Act includes rules that ban platforms like Coinbase from offering interests or rewards on stablecoins. 

The ban is a major win for traditional banking platforms, which claim that high stablecoin returns were taking away trillions of dollars from their sector. 

If these issues aren’t resolved, the bill could fail to pass before the 2026 election cycle starts and freeze all legislative processes.

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