A report issued by the Office of the Maine State Treasurer highlighted the U.S. state’s interest in officially managing the abandoned and recovered crypto assets.
The program evaluation report of Maine uncovered the state’s lack of preparedness when it comes to handling cryptocurrencies. It read:
According to official data, the state of Maine currently holds over $328 million in unclaimed property. The website requires the name, address and property ID information of claimants searching for an unclaimed property.
The report also uncovered the state treasurer’s interest in implementing reforms for emerging issues entailing technology, automated clearing house (ACH) payments and cryptocurrencies. It stated:
The issue around unclaimed cryptocurrencies is a phenomenon well-known across the Ethereum ecosystem as well. 8,893 people participated in an Ether (ETH) presale event in the summer of 2014. However, nearly a decade later, millions of dollars in ETH lie unclaimed in those presale wallets.
Related: Illinois Can Claim ‘Abandoned’ Cryptocurrency Under New Bill
Recently, Maine Wire reported that members of the Maine Democratic Party refused to return a donation of $100,000 they had received from Sam Bankman-Fried. The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York demanded that political committees return the donations received from FTX after winning seven guilty verdicts in the FTX-SBF case.
Last year, crypto exchange Coinbase launched a tool capable of recovering unsupported ERC-20 tokens that were 'mistakenly sent' to the exchange’s address.
“Our recovery tool is able to move unsupported assets directly from your inbound address to your self-custodial wallet without exposing private keys at any point,” said Coinbase.
Read more on cointelegraph.com