The legislators of Arizona visit a previously rejected bill with which the State can manage a reserve fund that is made up of seized cryptocurrencies.
House account 2324 failed in an earlier vote of the house, but is moving again after a narrow 16-14 senate decision on June 19.
This decision returns the bill to Arizona’s house for a final reading. If it protects the majority support, it goes to Gouverneur Katie Hobbs for approval.
Bill Details
House Bill 2324 Outlines a framework for creating a “Bitcoin and Digital Assets Reserve Fund”, which would be fully financed by Crypto seized in criminal investigations.
These digital assets would be sold on crypto fairs approved by the government or comparable platforms to guarantee fair market prices and full transparency. However, the bill allows some digital assets to remain in their native form if necessary.
The first proceeds of $ 300,000 of each confiscation would be deposited in the Anti-Racketeering Revolving Fund of Arizona. Each amount that is larger than that as follows: 50% for the same anti-rac color fund, 25% for the General Fund of the State and 25% for the newly proposed Bitcoin and Digital Assets Reserve Fund.
The bill requires security capacity with the help of a safe digital wallet controlled by the state. This storage must be managed by authorized staff to prevent loss, theft or unauthorized access. The bill also limits its scope to digital assets forfeited through the office of the attorney general.
In addition, HB 2324 modernizes the laws of Arizona forfeiture suspension by formally determining how digital assets are treated in criminal cases. It also offers guidelines for protecting innocent owners of third parties whose ownership may have been used unconsciously in illegal activities.
Arizona’s Crypto -Refinitive Efforts
HB 2324 reflects a broader trend in the growing involvement of Arizona in the crypto legislation.
Since 2020, the state legislators have had entered More than a dozen blockchain-related accounts, which cover everything, from reserve strategies to digital rules for custody of assets.
Some of these accounts have since become laws, whereby the most recent state enables the state to claim the ownership of sleeping crypto after three years of inactivity.
The law also allows the state to use those tokens or to participate in airdrops, which means that the income is diverted to public funds.
Despite this progress, Governor Hobbs has expressed caution in the past. She was veto about an earlier proposal for a strategic Bitcoin reserve, stating concern about volatility and a lack of proven utility.