This article was first published on TurkishNY Radio.
Numbers move markets, but crypto has a twist: the same coin can look “owned” on-chain and still be legally unsettled off-chain. That nuance is now central to the US strategic Bitcoin reserve debate, where the size of U.S.-linked bitcoin holdings is being treated as a signal even as courts decide what portion can stay in government hands.
Trackers estimate government-controlled entities hold about 328,372 BTC. That figure has fueled the idea that the US strategic Bitcoin reserve is a stable stockpile. The catch is that not every coin in that tally is “free and clear.” A large block is tied to the 2016 Bitfinex hack, and a restitution order could shift roughly 94,643 BTC out of custody quickly.
Why the US strategic Bitcoin reserve can shrink without a sale
The executive order establishing a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a broader digital asset stockpile emphasizes consolidation and long-term holding, but it also allows court-directed dispositions, including returning assets to identifiable victims. Restitution is not a policy choice. It is a legal obligation.
That is why the US strategic Bitcoin reserve can look big on dashboards while still containing coins that are being held for someone else. When a judge settles the question, the accounting changes first, and the market story changes with it.

The Bitfinex coins: 94,643 BTC markets keep counting
The case goes back to August 2016, when about 119,754 BTC were stolen. In February 2022, the Department of Justice announced arrests tied to an alleged laundering scheme and said it had seized billions of dollars in cryptocurrency linked to the hack. The recovered amount cited for that seizure is about 94,643 BTC.
The slow part is the victim question. Reporting has highlighted competing claims over who should receive restitution, the exchange as an entity, individual customers, or a split outcome shaped by how losses were handled after the theft. That dispute can determine where the bitcoin goes, and whether the handoff is contested.
If the court orders an in-kind return, meaning bitcoin returned as bitcoin, the visible size of the US strategic Bitcoin reserve could drop by about 30% overnight, even though no coins were sold into the market.
The indicators that matter for traders and editors
Custody status is the first tell, some coins are fully forfeited. Others are held pending restitution. Those buckets behave differently, even if both appear as government-controlled in datasets.
Liquidity is the second tell as a restitution transfer is a handoff, not an auction, so it does not automatically create immediate sell pressure. Even so, a sudden change in the reported US strategic Bitcoin reserve figure can jolt sentiment, because traders often price the possibility of future selling before it shows up in exchange flows.
Narrative is the third tell as when the reported reserve number drops, it can read like a reversal, even when it is simply a court process being completed. That framing can move fast in a market that trades policy cues.
Conclusion
The practical takeaway is that the US strategic Bitcoin reserve is not a single, clean bucket. It is a blend of forfeited holdings and coins still moving through court procedure. For market readers, the discipline is to separate transfers from sales, and headlines from settlement, because the US strategic Bitcoin reserve can still change on paper long before it changes real market supply.
FAQs
What is the US strategic Bitcoin reserve?
It is a federal framework for consolidating government-held bitcoin into a reserve account, alongside a broader digital asset stockpile, under an executive order and related guidance.
Why does 94,643 BTC matter?
It is the widely cited recovered portion tied to the 2016 Bitfinex hack, and it is large enough to shift the headline US strategic Bitcoin reserve total by roughly 30% if returned.
Glossary
In-kind restitution: A court-ordered return of bitcoin as bitcoin, rather than converting it to dollars first.
orfeiture: A legal process that can transfer property tied to crime to the government, subject to third-party claims.
Sources
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, legal, or tax advice.





