Ukraine Moves $8.3 Million In Seized USDT To State Management
Ukraine has moved more than $8.3 million in seized USDT into state management through ARMA, but the assets have not been formally confiscated and four suspects remain unconvicted.

ARMA Receives Seized USDT Under A Court Order
Ukraine has transferred more than $8.3 million worth of seized USDT into state management, according to the country’s Prosecutor General’s Office, putting cryptocurrency inside the same asset-recovery system that already handles seized homes and cars.
The office said the funds were sent to a cryptocurrency wallet controlled by the National Agency for Finding, Tracing and Management of Assets, known as ARMA.
ARMA manages property seized in criminal cases, while investigators and courts decide whether assets can be confiscated.
The transfer was made under a court order after an investigation by the State Bureau of Investigation.
Prosecutor General Ruslan Kravchenko said the sum was equal to about 372 million Ukrainian hryvnias.
The office described the handover as the first time seized crypto assets had actually been transferred into Ukrainian state management.
Ukraine Court Transfers Seized USDT Before Final Confiscation
The legal status of the tokens remains limited.
ARMA controls the wallet, but the USDT has not been formally confiscated.
Confiscation still requires a conviction, and the four suspects in the case remain in custody without convictions.
Custody gives the state control over the wallet while the criminal case continues.
It does not turn the tokens into state-owned reserve assets by itself, and it does not settle whether the money can later be placed inside a national crypto reserve.
Investigators accused an alleged international hacker group of targeting people and companies across Europe and the U.S. The alleged activity included private-data theft, ransom demands and laundering in Ukraine through real estate, cars and other high-value property.
The Prosecutor General’s Office said the transferred funds came from wallets controlled by a member of that alleged group.
Ukraine Has Not Approved A National Crypto Reserve
The transfer comes as Ukraine works on the potential creation of a crypto reserve.
Chainalysis data recorded $206.3 billion in crypto value received by Ukraine between mid-2024 and mid-2025, placing the country fourth in Europe.
Ukraine is also debating a crypto reserve, but the court case still controls the transferred assets.
The U.S. comparison points to a reserve funded by crypto forfeited through criminal and civil cases, not by open-market purchases.
Ukraine’s USDT transfer has not reached that stage because forfeiture has not been completed.
Authorities have seized assets worth over $11.1 million in the case.
The list covers homes, apartments, cars, $1 million in cash and virtual assets worth more than $8.3 million.
Investigators estimate damage from the alleged group’s activities at more than $100 million.
The public details identify the wallet transfer, ARMA custody and the criminal-case basis.
The public record does not identify final state ownership, reserve eligibility or ARMA custody procedures for a long criminal proceeding.
The case also separates asset recovery from investment policy.
A wallet transfer can preserve alleged criminal proceeds while a prosecution moves forward, but it does not answer who bears custody risk, what court outcome would move the tokens to the state permanently, or whether lawmakers would later count forfeited crypto toward a reserve.
Ukraine has named the asset-recovery agency, the court-order basis, the USDT amount and the criminal-case context.
It has not disclosed a conviction, a formal confiscation order, final ownership of the tokens or approval of a national crypto reserve.
















