
Brazil this week passed a law allowing authorities to use seized criminal crypto to fund public security resources.
A law signed by President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Tuesday creates new powers to freeze and seize assets — including crypto, stocks and shares and luxury goods — both during investigation and after conviction.
The law allows authorities to permanently forfeit the seized assets, and then sell them to fund police to continue fighting crime.
“Lost assets and values may be provisionally used by public security agencies for police re-equipment, training and special operations, upon authorization of the enforcement judge,” the law reads.
This isn’t the first time lawmakers have focused on using seized assets to fund the state.
In a complementary bill last year, President Lula sent legislation to the country’s congress pushing to allow authorities to seize property — including digital assets — and convert it into fiat currency.
The new law
The latest “Anti-Gang” law also creates a financial incentive for the public to help cops. A part of the bill states that those who provide information to authorities and collaborate to help find assets can be rewarded with up to 5% of what is seized — when assets are liquidated.
It also states that seized assets linked to drug trafficking have a separate regime and will be used for the federal drug policy fund rather than security fund.
The new law also creates harsher sentences for “ultra-violent criminal organizations, paramilitary groups, and private militias that use violence or serious threats to control territories, disrupt public services, attack infrastructure, or intimidate authorities and civilians.”
Crypto market movers
Bitcoin was trading for $66,827 per coin on Saturday, up 1% over the past 24 hours but down 5% over the past seven days.
Ethereum’s price was trading for close to $2,022, after rising nearly 2% over the past day.
What we’re reading
Goldman says the bottom is in... — Milk Road
Mathew Di Salvo is a news correspondent with DL News. Got a tip? Email at [email protected].
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Tatiana Schlossberg's diagnosis puts spotlight on leukemia: What to know - 2
Hezbollah claims right to respond to killing of top commander - 3
Lawsuit claims ChatGPT exacerbated man's delusions leading to murder-suicide - 4
New portrait of the oldest-known supernova | Space photo of the day for March 27, 2026 - 5
Don’t let food poisoning crash your Thanksgiving dinner
Israel says soldiers wounded in Gaza fighting amid fragile truce
The 10 Most Persuasive Forerunners in Innovation
MacArthur Foundation awards $100M to outbreak surveillance network, a boost amid global health cuts
Figure out how to Guarantee Your Dental Embeds Endure forever
Wisconsin judge sends Slender Man attacker back to mental health institution after group home escape
Hubble Space Telescope spies dusty debris from two cosmic collisions
Let them eat (Taylor Swift) cake: The baker turning A-listers into life-size desserts
6 Savvy Locks for Lofts
Taylor Swift's 'The End of an Era' docuseries: Everything you need to know, plus how to watch for less













