According to reports, the U.S. government has sent an additional $350,000 in cryptocurrency. This had been initially stolen from Alameda Research and other FTX-related accounts on the Binance platform, close to three years after the collapse of the cryptocurrency kingdom. This money will definitely help in paying off creditors due to the bankruptcy of the firm.
The deal illustrates a larger trend, even though the sum is modest in comparison to the billions associated with the FTX estate. U.S. government-controlled wallets have transferred about $8.31 million in cryptocurrency assets in only the last month.
Assets including Chainlink (LINK), Aave (AAVE), Chiliz (CHZ), and Balancer (BAL) have been transferred recently. Multiple batches are going via Coinbase Prime, a tool commonly utilised for institutional custody and liquidation.
The case of FTX going bankrupt continues to be ranked among the largest scams in the world of cryptocurrencies. Having been perceived initially as one of the biggest crypto exchanges, FTX went into bankruptcy due to the discovery that its sister trading platform, Alameda Research, had committed fraudulent withdrawals of its clients’ money.
Consequences were dire since many billions of dollars of market capitalisation were wiped out. Also, it has a dramatic depreciation in the valuation of most major cryptocurrencies. Investor confidence declined, and in the months that followed, a number of cryptocurrency companies experienced liquidity issues.
Numerous wallets holding seized Alameda assets have been monitored for transfers as part of the asset recovery process. From the FTX Alameda Seized Funds accounts, the US government transferred $33.6 million in cryptocurrency to two undisclosed locations.
The estate conducted multibillion-dollar distributions in 2025 and 2026 using BitGo, Kraken, and Payoneer to manage KYC checks and transfer fiat straight into consumers’ bank accounts or external wallets.
For creditors still awaiting compensation, each recovered asset adds to the pool available for future distributions. The latest transfer is unlikely to impact crypto prices directly due to its modest size. However, government-linked wallet activity remains closely watched because large-scale liquidations can create short-term selling pressure, particularly in less liquid altcoins.
In addition, these transfers signal continued progress in converting recovered digital assets into funds that can ultimately be returned to victims of one of crypto’s most significant corporate failures. As the FTX repayment process advances, every movement of seized Alameda funds represents another step toward closing a chapter that reshaped the digital asset industry.
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