Written by: Gino Matos
Compiled by: Saoirse, Foresight News
Key Takeaways
- Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated that the U.S. seized approximately $1 billion in Iranian crypto assets but did not disclose the relevant wallet addresses or token composition.
- Asset category is crucial: Bitcoins legally forfeited can be transferred to the Trump Strategic Bitcoin Reserve; other tokens will be handled separately.
- It remains unclear whether the assets are frozen, seized, or officially forfeited. Their legal status directly determines if the funds can be added to the reserve.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated at the Reagan National Economic Forum that the United States has seized approximately $1 billion in Iranian crypto assets. This seizure of Iranian assets serves as the first practical test following the implementation of the Trump administration's crypto reserve policy. Bessent added that the U.S. "directly took control of the wallets involved." According to a CBS report, he characterized these funds as money stolen from the Iranian people. However, Bessent did not disclose the asset types or corresponding wallet information—key details that precisely determine whether the funds can flow into the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve established by Trump.
According to an executive order signed by Trump in 2025, U.S. government-owned digital assets are divided into two separate accounts: The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, specifically designated to hold bitcoins forfeited through civil or criminal judicial proceedings or collected as civil monetary penalties. The order explicitly states that government bitcoins deposited into this account are permanently prohibited from being sold. The other account is the U.S. Digital Asset Reserve, which holds non-bitcoin digital assets that have undergone final forfeiture proceedings. This classification framework makes the current seizure of Iranian crypto assets a practical test case: Only bitcoins that complete the final forfeiture process can be added to the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve; all other remaining tokens will be placed into the U.S. Digital Asset Reserve.
If the seized Iranian assets include bitcoin and the legal forfeiture is successfully completed, they can be incorporated into the reserve. If they consist of stablecoins or other types of tokens, they will likely be transferred to the Digital Asset Reserve. Another possibility is that the assets are merely in a frozen state, in which case the U.S. has not yet obtained legal ownership.
Clarifying the Actual Legal Meaning of "Seizure"
As early as April, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions on multiple Iran-linked wallets. Tether simultaneously disclosed that it cooperated with U.S. regulators to freeze a total of $344 million USDT across two addresses. Blockchain risk management firm TRM Labs confirmed that these wallets were linked to the Central Bank of Iran, the IRGC Quds Force, and Lebanon's Hezbollah. For the remaining approximately $656 million in assets, there is no publicly available breakdown by wallet or token type.
"Physical seizure" does not equal "legal ownership." OFAC sanctions rules clearly state that blocked assets are only subject to account freezing; the U.S. does not automatically gain ownership rights. Taking stablecoins like USDT as an example, issuers cooperating with regulators to lock addresses constitutes a sanction freeze, not a judicial forfeiture in the criminal law sense. Seizure at the enforcement level only represents the government's temporary control of the assets; ownership still awaits the outcome of forfeiture litigation.
Final forfeiture is a mandatory threshold for assets to enter the reserve: After assets complete the forfeiture process, deductions are made for victim compensation, specialized enforcement expenses, allocations to local law enforcement agencies, legally exempted returns, etc. Only the remaining assets are eligible for transfer into the reserve or the reserve account. Bessent's public statements leave the legal status of these assets entirely uncertain.
At the current Bitcoin price of approximately $73,000, if the entire $1 billion consisted of Bitcoin, it would be equivalent to about 13,632 BTC. According to 2025 statistics, the U.S. government has accumulated about 200,000 compliant bitcoins through past judicial proceedings. If this amount of BTC is fully deposited, the increment would represent 6.8% of the existing reserve volume. In current public records, only the $344 million USDT freeze is documented; details regarding the remaining $656 million in assets—their token types and legal forfeiture progress—are not publicly disclosed. No assets have completed the statutory forfeiture process.
The Industry Basis for the $1 Billion Seizure Figure
Considering the scale of Iran's crypto industry, the $1 billion seizure figure is reasonable, but the asset composition remains opaque.
Chainalysis estimates: In 2025, Iran's annual crypto transfer volume reached $7.78 billion. In Q4 2025, funds flows related to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard accounted for half of the country's total crypto transaction volume. TRM Labs estimates Iran's total annual crypto activity to be nearly $10 billion. Iran's leading exchange, Nobitex, has 11 million users, handling 70% of the country's crypto transactions. Investigations show that this platform has long processed transfers worth hundreds of millions of dollars for sanctioned entities like the Central Bank of Iran and the Revolutionary Guard.
Combining the above industry data, multiple rounds of U.S. enforcement actions plus issuer freezes totaling $1 billion in locked assets is plausible from an industry logic perspective, but the specific asset breakdown cannot be verified. The publicly announced $344 million USDT constitutes only 33% of the total, leaving 65.6% of the funds unaccounted for.
The known $344 million USDT freeze accounts for only 33% of the $1 billion in Iranian cryptocurrency that Bessent claims was seized, leaving $656 million publicly unaccounted for.
Projecting the Token Composition and Destination of the Seized Assets
If the $1 billion includes a significant amount of Bitcoin, and the U.S. completes the ownership forfeiture with no need for victim compensation and no diversion for enforcement expenses, the corresponding Bitcoin would enter the non-saleable strategic reserve. Crypto assets originally used by Iran to evade U.S. financial blockades would be transformed into a sovereign book reserve for the U.S. through sanction enforcement.
Currently, the only confirmed assets are $344 million USDT, frozen by Tether in cooperation with regulatory address freezes. If the remaining $656 million is also primarily stablecoins, the entire event essentially becomes a case of stablecoin regulatory compliance enforcement. Frozen USDT would remain locked; non-bitcoin assets, after forfeiture, would be transferred to the Digital Asset Reserve, with subsequent disposal plans determined entirely by the Treasury Secretary. A complete list of wallets and token types would directly change the nature of the event: it could either represent the implementation of U.S. sovereign Bitcoin accumulation or merely stablecoin regulatory compliance. Bessent has not disclosed any details at this stage.
The executive order also stipulates that forfeited assets can be returned to rightful victim claimants, allocated for case expenses, shared with state law enforcement agencies, or legally exempted from return. Any of these scenarios would prevent the assets from entering the reserve. These provisions represent multiple layers of hurdles for assets transitioning from "seized" to "treasury reserve," which can be triggered at any point before or after forfeiture.
The institutional framework established by Trump's reserve decree turns all future crypto seizures targeting adversarial nations into a matter of U.S. sovereign asset management.
In the future, each U.S. crypto enforcement action against sanctioned entities like Iran and North Korea will involve three determinations: token type, legal status, and which treasury account to assign them to. Only by simultaneously meeting three conditions—the asset being Bitcoin, completing statutory forfeiture, and having no applicable compensation or allocation exemptions—can these Iranian assets potentially supplement the U.S. strategic reserve. As long as they successfully pass the two major hurdles of the forfeiture process and legal exemptions, crypto assets originally intended to circumvent U.S. financial controls would, in turn, become part of U.S. sovereign assets.










