Brazil’s lawmakers have equipped public security agencies with a new instrument in the fight against organized crime: the ability to repurpose confiscated cryptocurrency to fund policing efforts. Law No. 15.358, approved by the National Congress and published this week, creates a legal framework that treats digital assets as instruments of crime that can be seized, restricted from exchanges, and redirected to support police operations. The measure extends a police toolkit beyond traditional cash and property, allowing authorities to forfeit crypto assets tied to criminal activity and, with judicial authorization, deploy those assets for police reequipment, training, and special operations. The law signals a coordinated approach to asset recovery that could involve cross-border cooperation with international authorities, reflecting Brazil’s aim to address crypto-enabled crime on a global scale. Key takeaways Crypto assets tied to criminal activity can be treated as crime instruments, ...
Key Takeaways Bhutan's state-owned investment arm, Druk Holding and Investments, transferred 519.707 BTC worth approximately $36.75 million to external addresses. Total 2026 outflows from Bhutan's Bitcoin treasury have now exceeded $152 million, with holdings falling from nearly 13,000 BTC in late 2024 to approximately 4,453 BTC, a 66% reduction. Bhutan's earlier pledge to allocate up to 10,000 BTC toward the Gelephu Mindfulness City project now faces significant headwinds. The Royal Government of Bhutan moved another batch of Bitcoin from its sovereign treasury, transferring 519.707 BTC worth approximately $36.75 million to external wallets on Wednesday. The transaction spotted by Arkham Intelligence marks Bhutan's third major Bitcoin movement in March alone and continues a pattern of steady, institutional-grade liquidations that has defined the kingdom's crypto strategy in 2026. A Quietly Depleting Holdings The kingdom's holdings have fallen roughly ...