The United States Supreme Court declined to take on a case concerning the ownership of 69,370 Bitcoin — worth $4.38 billion — that the US government seized from the dark web marketplace Silk Road.
The request for review was brought by Battle Born Investments, a company that claimed it had purchased rights to the seized Bitcoin (BTC) through a bankruptcy estate.
The Supreme Court’s refusal to hear the case could clear the US government to sell the stack of Bitcoin.
Battle Born previously failed to convince a district court in 2022 and an appeals court in 2023 that it had acquired the BTC through a bankruptcy claim after Silk Road shut down in 2013.
A San Francisco appellate court judge tossed the case last year, saying the firm didn’t have a valid claim to the BTC haul.
Denial list of cases from the US Supreme Court. Source: Supreme Court
The top US court accepts only 100 to 150 of the more than 7,000 cases it’s asked to review yearly.
The Supreme Court’s decision means the US government’s civil forfeiture action is now far more likely to succeed, allowing it to sell the Bitcoin.
The US government already moved about $2 billion worth of the Silk Road-linked Bitcoin on July 29.
The transfers were tied to the Marshals Service, which uses Coinbase Prime to custody seized cryptocurrencies.
Related: Compliance experts should help regulate crypto — Silk Road 2.0 founder
Governments offloading large amounts of Bitcoin has caused considerable market volatility in the past.
This was seen when the German government sold almost 50,000 Bitcoin — worth over $3.15 billion — over the course of a few weeks in June and July.
It’s not clear what the US intends to do with the coins, but Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump pledged to build a “strategic Bitcoin stockpile” should he win the election on Nov. 5.
Democrat candidate Kamala Harris hasn’t publicly declared what she would do with cryptocurrency seized by the US.
Silk Road was created in 2011 by Ross Ulbricht, who is serving a life sentence for conspiring to commit money laundering and distributing narcotics, among other convictions.
Trump promised to release Ulbricht from prison should he win the presidency.
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