1. United States
  2. Ohio
  3. Letter

No Secret Federal Wallets: We Need a Watchdog for Seized Crypto

To: Rep. Beatty, Sen. Husted, Sen. Moreno

From: A verified voter in Columbus, OH

May 31

I am writing to you today as your constituent to urge you to assert Congress’s constitutional authority over federal asset management and reject proposals to transform seized illicit assets into a permanent, government-run "Strategic Crypto Reserve." The administration’s directives to stockpile digital assets—including approximately $1 billion in cryptocurrency recently seized from Iranian-linked terrorist networks—represent a dangerous departure from established legal frameworks. Historically, assets seized from state-sponsored terrorist networks are liquidated and directed to the U.S. Victims of State Sponsored Terrorism (USVSST) Fund. By hoarding these assets to build an executive-controlled stockpile, the government is effectively bypassing statutory restitution processes, leaving victims of international terror without the compensation they are legally owed.  While I am aware of the bipartisan American Reserve Modernization Act (ARMA), any "Strategic Reserve" must prioritize victim restitution and transparency over executive discretion. We cannot allow seized assets to be managed through back-of-the-envelope executive orders lacking clear, independent accountability. This policy shift creates deep fiscal and governance concerns that cut across party lines: - Subverting the Rule of Law: Asset forfeiture laws exist to punish criminals and make victims whole. Converting these forfeitures into a permanent government investment portfolio fundamentally subverts the purpose of the law, choosing government accumulation over victim restitution.  - Fiscal Irresponsibility & Market Speculation: The federal government’s role is to act as a stable steward of public resources, not a speculative day-trader. Forcing the U.S. Treasury to hold highly volatile digital assets exposes public funds to immense market risk, creating an unpredictable and fiscally irresponsible balance sheet. - Defending Separation of Powers: The executive branch does not have the unilateral authority to create discretionary investment funds outside the scope of congressional appropriations. Congress must defend its "power of the purse" and demand strict guardrails to prevent potential conflicts of interest or market manipulation by federal agencies. Regardless of one's view on the digital asset industry, the federal government should not be in the business of holding speculative portfolios at the expense of crime victims. I urge you to support legislative efforts to rein in this overreach, and specifically ask that you: 1. Prioritize Victim Restitution: Mandate that all digital assets seized from criminal or terrorist networks be liquidated and deposited into established victim compensation funds, such as the USVSST Fund, rather than absorbed into a government reserve. 2. Require Strict, Independent Oversight: Oppose any measures allowing the executive branch to manage a digital stockpile without explicit, rigorous congressional authorization. Any oversight must include mandatory, quarterly audits performed by an independent third party—not the Treasury Department itself. 3. Enact Strict Firewalls: Establish ironclad conflict-of-interest prohibitions to ensure federal holdings cannot be used to influence asset valuations or benefit private political interests. Our institutions must prioritize the rule of law and fiscal sanity over speculative financial experiments. I look forward to hearing how you plan to address this critical issue and restore proper checks and balances.

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