‘Bitcoin Isn’t Going Anywhere’: Trump Officials Discuss DOJ, FBI Refocus on Crypto Crime, Not Developers
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel used a Bitcoin 2026 Conference panel to signal a shift in how the U.S. government approaches digital assets, stressing support for developers and a focus on crime rather than code.
Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal, moderating the virtual discussion, opened by asking Blanche and Patel for their Bitcoin origin stories.
Blanche said his son pushed him toward Bitcoin and called him a “clown and idiot” for not investing, while also noting that his government role bars him from owning assets. Patel framed Bitcoin and other virtual assets as economic infrastructure, saying they are assets “just like business and everything else” that “power and muscle the world.”
Blanche: Prior administrations suppressed bitcoin and crypto
Grewal then pressed the officials on past prosecutions tied to crypto. Blanche said some prior FBI and Justice Department efforts were misguided, suggesting that earlier administrations pursued cases against developers in ways that cut across core rights.
He argued that the government should not treat software builders as stand‑ins for criminals and said the focus should be on “the third party criminal and not… the builders and platform builders.”
According to Blanche, aggressive enforcement caused some platforms to leave the United States and reflected a lack of understanding that “stifled innovation” and “suffocated enthusiasts.”
“In the last administration, we were stifling innovation and depriving US citizen and Bitcoin and crypto enthusiasts from doing what they should be able to,” Blanche said.
Blanche drew a line between criminal use of crypto and the underlying technology. He said the government will not excuse bad actors who use Bitcoin or other digital assets for crime, but he rejected the idea that ordinary participants should live in constant fear of prosecution.
On policy questions tied to cases such as Tornado Cash, Roman Storm, and Samourai Wallet, he said that if a person is developing software and is not the third‑party user committing a crime, “you are not going to get investigated and/or get charged.” He told coders that if they are under investigation, “your lawyer should feel very comfortable working with the FBI.”
Patel echoed that stance while stressing active enforcement against fraud. He said the FBI has spent the past year targeting scam centers that use crypto, including networks tied to foreign adversaries that seek to “police Americans and fleece them from their hard earned assets.”
His goal, he said, is for the bureau to “look at the right people” and for Americans who buy digital assets to feel their funds are safe. Patel added that the FBI is proactively investigating crime in Bitcoin and other digital assets and is pushing prevention work on the “front end” to stop schemes before they reach victims.
Coders shouldn’t “sleep with their eye open”
Asked why this moment is different for Bitcoin policy, Blanche pointed to the White House. He said the shift “starts with President Trump,” describing the current team as “by far the most pro‑crypto administration in the world” and stating that “we want to be the crypto capital of the world.”
Blanche criticized what he called “attacks on the industry” by the prior administration as “outrageous” and “ill advised,” and said the government needs to adjust its thinking about digital assets and open‑source code.
Both officials framed the emerging doctrine in simple terms: Bitcoin and code are not the targets, crime is. Patel said federal law enforcement will prosecute criminal activity “in Bitcoin or out of Bitcoin.”
Blanche said people in crypto “shouldn’t sleep with one eye open” over routine development or use, as long as they are not engaged in fraud, money laundering, or other offenses.
This post first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
read the full story
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche and FBI Director Kash Patel used a Bitcoin 2026 Conference panel to signal a shift in how the U.S. government approaches digital assets, stressing support for developers and a focus on crime rather than code.
Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal, moderating the virtual discussion, opened by asking Blanche and Patel for their Bitcoin origin stories.
Blanche said his son pushed him toward Bitcoin and called him a “clown and idiot” for not investing, while also noting that his government role bars him from owning assets. Patel framed Bitcoin and other virtual assets as economic infrastructure, saying they are assets “just like business and everything else” that “power and muscle the world.”
Blanche: Prior administrations suppressed bitcoin and crypto
Grewal then pressed the officials on past prosecutions tied to crypto. Blanche said some prior FBI and Justice Department efforts were misguided, suggesting that earlier administrations pursued cases against developers in ways that cut across core rights.
He argued that the government should not treat software builders as stand‑ins for criminals and said the focus should be on “the third party criminal and not… the builders and platform builders.”
According to Blanche, aggressive enforcement caused some platforms to leave the United States and reflected a lack of understanding that “stifled innovation” and “suffocated enthusiasts.”
“In the last administration, we were stifling innovation and depriving US citizen and Bitcoin and crypto enthusiasts from doing what they should be able to,” Blanche said.
Blanche drew a line between criminal use of crypto and the underlying technology. He said the government will not excuse bad actors who use Bitcoin or other digital assets for crime, but he rejected the idea that ordinary participants should live in constant fear of prosecution.
On policy questions tied to cases such as Tornado Cash, Roman Storm, and Samourai Wallet, he said that if a person is developing software and is not the third‑party user committing a crime, “you are not going to get investigated and/or get charged.” He told coders that if they are under investigation, “your lawyer should feel very comfortable working with the FBI.”
Patel echoed that stance while stressing active enforcement against fraud. He said the FBI has spent the past year targeting scam centers that use crypto, including networks tied to foreign adversaries that seek to “police Americans and fleece them from their hard earned assets.”
His goal, he said, is for the bureau to “look at the right people” and for Americans who buy digital assets to feel their funds are safe. Patel added that the FBI is proactively investigating crime in Bitcoin and other digital assets and is pushing prevention work on the “front end” to stop schemes before they reach victims.
Coders shouldn’t “sleep with their eye open”
Asked why this moment is different for Bitcoin policy, Blanche pointed to the White House. He said the shift “starts with President Trump,” describing the current team as “by far the most pro‑crypto administration in the world” and stating that “we want to be the crypto capital of the world.”
Blanche criticized what he called “attacks on the industry” by the prior administration as “outrageous” and “ill advised,” and said the government needs to adjust its thinking about digital assets and open‑source code.
Both officials framed the emerging doctrine in simple terms: Bitcoin and code are not the targets, crime is. Patel said federal law enforcement will prosecute criminal activity “in Bitcoin or out of Bitcoin.”
Blanche said people in crypto “shouldn’t sleep with one eye open” over routine development or use, as long as they are not engaged in fraud, money laundering, or other offenses.
This post first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
read the full storyArthur Hayes Calls $125K Bitcoin by Year-End as War Spending Floods Markets With Cash
BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes, now CIO at crypto family office Maelstrom, told Bitcoin Las Vegas…
SEC Chair Paul Atkins Tells Bitcoin Las Vegas 2026 a New Era Starts Now at the Agency
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chairman Paul Atkins told attendees at Bitcoin Las…
Israeli regulators approve shekel-pegged stablecoin
The approval of the BILS stablecoin issued by Israeli exchange Bits of Gold came after a two-year…
Bitcoin whale holdings hit five-month high: Is BTC headed to $80K next?
Bitcoin accumulation by whales and institutional investors is reducing the available supply of BTC…
Bitcoin rally shows signs of fatigue as key indicators turn bearish
Cooling U.S. demand, elevated Bitfinex whale positioning and a key on chain rejection point to short…
Ethereum Tracks Bitcoin Rally: Why A Surge to $3,400 Could Be The Beginning
Ethereum is beginning to mirror Bitcoin’s bullish momentum, steadily climbing as market confidence…
Fidelity Says Bitcoin Has Thin Profit Cushion as Macro Risks Drive 25% YTD Decline
Fidelity Digital Assets released its Q2 2026 Signals Report on Monday, showing bitcoin holding a net…
Are stablecoins now the core plumbing of global finance?
Stablecoins have “quietly become core financial plumbing” and pushed on‑chain finance past a…
Western Union eyeing stablecoin launch to settle global transactions without SWIFT, CEO says
The 175-year-old money-transfer firm also plans to issue a stablecoin-linked card for payments and…
Bitcoin Developer Plans to 'Reassign' Coins Linked to Satoshi Nakamoto in Hard Fork
Paul Sztorc’s proposed eCash fork would give investors coins cloned from wallets believed to…
House Republicans Warn That the America’s Bitcoin Weakness Will Benefit China
At Bitcoin 2026 in Las Vegas, three Republican members of Congress framed crypto regulation as a…
Bitcoin Las Vegas Faces Cypherpunk Revolt Over Regulator-Heavy Lineup
Bitcoin 2026 Conference faces a purist revolt as regulators and the Trump family headline its Las…
Bitcoin Stalls Below $80K as Geopolitical Risk Returns Ahead of Fed
Crude oil jumped as Trump called off Iran peace talks, dragging BTC back below $77,000 and…
Price predictions 4/27: SPX, DXY, BTC, ETH, XRP, BNB, SOL, DOGE, HYPE, ADA
Bitcoin fails to top $80,000 as analysts debate whether BTC has truly changed its trend or remains…
Aven Bitcoin Card Lets Holders Borrow Up to $1M Against BTC
Aven launches Bitcoin Visa Card offering BTC-backed credit up to $1 million, with rates starting at…
This Math Reveals Why Bitcoin Shorts Are About to Explode!
Bitcoin is facing a potential supply shock as Michael Saylor and Strategy keep accumulating BTC…
Bitcoin’s Sharpe Ratio Just Flipped — A Hidden Signal That Could Reshape the Market
TL;DR: The indicator collapsed to a record low of -43 before rebounding strongly, suggesting total…
Bitcoin’s Surge Could Be a Bull Trap, Top Analyst Sounds the Alarm
TL;DR Bitcoin trades near $76,840 after a 14.94% monthly gain, approaching a resistance zone between…
Kalshi Says Bitcoin Payments and Prediction Markets Are Building a New Exchange for Big Money
At the Bitcoin 2026 Conference, John Wang pitched Kalshi as a next-gen exchange where Bitcoin…
CryptoQuant CEO Says Bitcoin’s Bounce Is Fueled by Perp Traders, Not Spot Demand
TL;DR Ki Young Ju says Bitcoin’s rebound is being driven by perpetual futures, while spot demand…