The FBI has posted a new federal forfeiture notice listing nearly $1 million in cash, vehicles, luxury goods and collectibles tied to Adam Iza, the California cryptocurrency businessman known as “The Godfather,” who has pleaded guilty in two federal cases involving wire fraud, tax evasion, civil rights violations and an attempted Bitcoin robbery.
The June 25 FBI notice identifies seized assets including $184,200 in cash from a Dana Point property, $3,700 seized from Iza at a Costa Mesa parking lot, a 2022 BMW M50i, a 2021 Ford F-250, a Jacob & Co. Opera Godfather musical watch, Louis Vuitton goods, Godfather memorabilia and additional luxury items seized from associates. The listed assets connected to Iza and related names total approximately $997,355 based on the values in the notice.
The forfeiture notice adds a new financial layer to one of the most unusual crypto crime cases in the United States. Iza, who operated a crypto trading business and used the “Godfather” nickname, has admitted to criminal conduct in California and Connecticut. In January 2025, the Justice Department said Iza agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy against rights, wire fraud and tax evasion after prosecutors accused him of using corrupt law enforcement connections, intimidation and fraud proceeds. In June 2026, the District of Connecticut said Iza pleaded guilty to a Hobbs Act robbery conspiracy tied to an attempted kidnapping and Bitcoin robbery.
The FBI Notice Shows How Crypto Crime Proceeds Moved Into Luxury Assets
The forfeiture notice is not a criminal complaint, but it is important because it shows the types of property the government is trying to recover. The FBI listed cash, cars, watches, handbags, designer goods and memorabilia rather than only digital wallets. That matters because crypto crime cases increasingly involve a familiar laundering pattern: digital assets or cyber fraud proceeds are converted into visible lifestyle assets before investigators move to seize them.
| Asset Category |
Examples Listed In FBI Notice |
Approximate Value |
| Cash |
Dana Point, Costa Mesa and Long Beach seizures |
$432,311 |
| Vehicles |
BMW M50i and Ford F-250 |
$105,300 |
| Watch |
Jacob & Co. Opera Godfather musical watch |
$275,000 |
| Luxury goods |
Louis Vuitton items and other designer goods |
$175,558 |
| Memorabilia |
Godfather collectibles |
$8,870 |
The most striking item is the Jacob & Co. Opera Godfather musical watch, valued at $275,000 in the FBI notice. Its inclusion reinforces how prosecutors have framed Iza’s public identity. The Justice Department described him as a cryptocurrency businessman who called himself “The Godfather,” while the forfeiture notice lists a watch and memorabilia built around that same image.
The notice also includes several direct digital asset seizures elsewhere in the document, including 19,995.4 USDT held at OKX under the name Van Phuc Nguyen, worth $19,999.40, and Bitcoin and Ethereum held at Coinbase accounts in Connecticut. Those entries are separate from the Iza matter, but they show the same enforcement pattern: the FBI is pursuing both crypto balances and assets allegedly bought or held after money moved into the traditional financial system.
Approximate Value Of Iza-Linked Assets In FBI Notice
| Asset Type |
Value |
| Cash |
$432,311 |
| Watch |
$275,000 |
| Luxury goods |
$175,558 |
| Vehicles |
$105,300 |
| Memorabilia |
$8,870 |
Adam Iza’s Case Connects Crypto, Fraud And Violence
The DOJ’s California case accused Iza and Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputy Eric Chase Saavedra of participating in a conspiracy that targeted victims through intimidation, extortion, illegal search warrants and abuses of police power. Prosecutors said Iza also admitted to wire fraud and tax evasion. According to the DOJ, the fraud involved illegally accessing Meta business manager accounts and exploiting advertising credit lines, causing tens of millions of dollars in losses.
The Connecticut case is different but connected by the same crypto crime ecosystem. Prosecutors said Iza helped coordinate an attempted robbery and kidnapping in Danbury in August 2024. The targets were the parents of an individual who had participated in the theft of hundreds of millions of dollars in Bitcoin. Iza pleaded guilty to conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery and is scheduled for sentencing in August.
| Case |
Jurisdiction |
Core Allegation |
Status |
| California federal case |
Central District of California |
Conspiracy against rights, wire fraud and tax evasion |
Plea agreement announced |
| Connecticut federal case |
District of Connecticut |
Attempted robbery and kidnapping linked to Bitcoin |
Guilty plea entered |
| FBI forfeiture notice |
Federal forfeiture process |
Cash, cars and luxury assets listed for forfeiture |
Claim deadline listed for August 18 |
The case fits a broader shift in crypto enforcement. Earlier crypto fraud stories often centered on online scams, exchange hacks, fake platforms or investment fraud. The Iza case shows a more physical form of crypto crime, where alleged or admitted conduct crosses into kidnapping, extortion, corrupt law enforcement activity and luxury asset laundering.
FinanceFeeds recently covered the U.S. seizure of $225 million in crypto from a global investment scam network, the guilty plea in the $1.8 billion HyperFund crypto fraud case, SEC charges over a $12.3 million AI crypto trading scheme, a 23-year sentence in the Meta-1 Coin scam and Daniel Chartraw’s conviction in a nearly $1 million crypto fraud case. The Iza forfeiture stands out because the government is pursuing luxury physical assets alongside criminal pleas.
Forfeiture Has Become A Core Tool In Crypto Enforcement
Federal forfeiture notices often receive less attention than indictments or guilty pleas, but they are increasingly important in crypto cases. Criminal prosecution can punish defendants, while forfeiture can recover property that prosecutors believe is connected to criminal proceeds. In digital asset cases, that can include wallets, exchange accounts, cash, vehicles, jewelry, watches, real estate or goods purchased after funds leave the blockchain.
The FBI notice explains that anyone seeking to contest the forfeiture must file a claim or petition by the deadline listed in the notice. For the California assets connected to the Iza entries, the notice lists August 18, 2026 as the last date to file. That means the government is now moving the asset recovery process forward while the related criminal cases continue through sentencing and post-plea proceedings.
| Enforcement Tool |
Purpose |
Why It Matters In Crypto Cases |
| Criminal charge |
Punishes alleged or admitted conduct |
Can lead to prison and criminal forfeiture |
| Civil forfeiture |
Targets property tied to illegal conduct |
Can recover assets even when proceeds move outside wallets |
| Exchange seizure |
Freezes digital balances |
Targets crypto before conversion to fiat |
| Luxury asset seizure |
Targets proceeds converted into goods |
Shows laundering into lifestyle assets |
The Iza entries also show why retail investors should treat crypto crime headlines as more than isolated criminal stories. The same ecosystem that produces online wallet thefts and investment scams can also produce violent recovery attempts, fake authority, corrupt intermediaries and pressure campaigns. When digital assets are stolen or disputed, the irreversibility of blockchain transactions can push criminals toward intimidation rather than litigation.
Takeaway
The FBI’s forfeiture notice adds nearly $1 million in seized assets to the Adam Iza story, turning a crypto fraud and violence case into an asset recovery case. The key point is not only that the government seized cash, cars and luxury goods. It is that crypto crime proceeds often leave the blockchain and reappear as watches, vehicles, handbags and cash. For investigators, following the money now means tracing both wallets and lifestyle assets. For investors, the case is another reminder that crypto enforcement increasingly spans cybercrime, fraud, physical violence and forfeiture.