Bitfinex is about to get a massive chunk of its past back as a U.S. court orders more than 94,000 seized bitcoin returned, turning a 2016 hack into a live test Bitfinex is about to get a massive chunk of its past back as a U.S. court orders more than 94,000 seized bitcoin returned, turning a 2016 hack into a live test

Court‑ordered BTC return to Bitfinex sets a precedent for crypto victim rights

2026/03/11 03:00
4 min read
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Bitfinex is about to get a massive chunk of its past back as a U.S. court orders more than 94,000 seized bitcoin returned, turning a 2016 hack into a live test of crypto property rights.

Summary
  • The restitution order covers 94,643 BTC plus forked coins seized from Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather “Razzlekhan” Morgan, part of roughly $10b traced and recovered by U.S. agencies.
  • Prosecutors argued Bitfinex customers are no longer “victims” under the MVRA because the exchange imposed a 36% haircut in 2016, then repaid users via BFX and recovery tokens.
  • Bitfinex plans to use 80% of the returned BTC to buy back and burn recovery and UNUS SED LEO tokens over about 18 months, tightening the link between its balance sheet and the recovered coins.

Bitfinex is about to get a massive chunk of its past back – and with it, a live test of how the legal system treats property rights in crypto. A U.S. federal court has ordered that more than 94,000 bitcoin seized in connection with the 2016 Bitfinex hack must be returned to the exchange as restitution, after prosecutors and defense lawyers agreed to a voluntary restitution deal tied to the plea agreements of Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather “Razzlekhan” Morgan.

What the ruling actually does

According to court filings cited by BitcoinNews and Brave New Coin, the order covers 94,643 BTC, alongside smaller amounts of forked assets like Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Gold, all of which had been recovered by U.S. law enforcement from wallets controlled by Lichtenstein and Morgan. The Department of Justice previously disclosed that agents seized over 94,000 BTC – then worth about $3.6 billion – after obtaining the private keys to a wallet that received 119,754 BTC stolen in the 2016 breach. TRM Labs later noted that, thanks to additional seizures and price appreciation, the government ultimately recovered roughly $10 billion in assets across BTC, ETH, stablecoins and other holdings linked to the case.

The key legal point is who counts as a “victim.” Prosecutors argued under the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act that, for the specific money‑laundering offenses at issue, Bitfinex’s customers no longer qualified because the exchange had already made them whole after the hack. Back in 2016, Bitfinex imposed a 36% haircut on all user balances, then issued BFX tokens that could be redeemed for cash or converted into equity in its parent iFinex; all BFX were redeemed within eight months. With that compensation complete, the DOJ told the court there was effectively “no victim” left in the narrow sense of the statute – clearing the way for Bitfinex itself to receive the seized coins via voluntary restitution.

Why it matters for market structure

Bitfinex has said it plans to use 80% of the returned bitcoin to buy back and burn recovery tokens it issued after the hack, removing them from circulation over roughly 18 months. That turns the restitution into a capital‑structure event: a large, lumpy inflow of BTC that, if executed as promised, shrinks outstanding liability‑style tokens and tightens the link between the exchange’s balance sheet and the recovered coins.

More broadly, the ruling is being read as a precedent on crypto property rights. Commenting on the case, one FTX creditor described it as a “clear ruling that property rights of crypto are recognized in the U.S.,” and argued that insolvent exchanges’ customers should be treated similarly when large asset pools are recovered. Combined with earlier U.S. government seizures – over 94,000 BTC recovered via on‑chain tracing, and subsequent hacks of government‑controlled wallets themselves – the Bitfinex saga underscores how transparent but durable blockchain records can both enable restitution and create new attack surfaces once state actors take custody.

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