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Tether froze 344 million dollars in USDT tied to Iran on April 23rd — nearly three weeks before U.S. banks were even officially told to watch for Iranian crypto activity. An offshore stablecoin company incorporated in the British Virgin Islands acted on direct communication from U.S. authorities we still can't fully read, which means Tether isn't operating outside American enforcement — it's functioning as an active sanctions node whether it's legally required to be or not. Now victims of Iranian attacks are in court trying to seize that frozen money directly, and if that works, it sets a precedent that stablecoin issuers aren't just compliance players but actual custodians of attachable assets in U.S. civil cases.
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