JAKARTA - Efforts to recover state losses through the tracing and management of assets from criminal acts continue to show significant results. Throughout 2025, the Attorney General's Office Asset Recovery Agency (BPA) managed to return Rp. 19.6 trillion to the state treasury.
Head of the Attorney General's Asset Recovery Agency, Kuntadi, said that law enforcement is no longer only oriented towards punishing perpetrators, but also ensuring that state losses due to criminal acts can be recovered.
"The current law enforcement paradigm is no longer oriented towards punishing perpetrators of criminal acts, but also shifts to recovering the losses caused to crime victims," said Kuntadi at the Best Results Fast Program (PHTC) press conference at the Government Communication Agency (Bakom RI) Office, Jakarta, Wednesday, June 24.
According to him, the recovery of assets is an important instrument to ensure that money and assets derived from criminal acts can be re-utilized for the benefit of the community and national development.
The achievement of returning funds to the state treasury in 2025 jumped sharply compared to the previous year. In 2024, the settlement of assets from general criminal offenses, special criminal offenses, and military offenses resulted in Non-Tax State Revenues (PNBP) of IDR 1.4 trillion. This figure increased to IDR 19.6 trillion in 2025.
Kuntadi explained that the Asset Recovery Agency, which was formed through Presidential Regulation Number 15 of 2024, has the task of conducting searches, confiscations, management, and recovery of assets resulting from crimes.
Currently, BPA manages 27,753 assets spread across various regions of Indonesia. Of these, as many as 1,376 assets with a value of more than Rp2 trillion are under BPA's direct control.
To strengthen efforts to return state losses, the Prosecutor's Office also formed a special task force tasked with tracking the assets of convicted corruptors and other perpetrators of criminal acts. One of the important achievements of the task force was the success in tracing the assets of convicted corruptor Eddy Tansil.
In 2026, BPA targets state revenue from the management of seized assets to reach IDR 3.2 trillion. As of June 2026, the deposit that has entered the state treasury was recorded at IDR 1.7 trillion.
"These performance achievements in 2026 will be achieved because at this time BPA has taken several policies in order to accelerate the completion of state seizures," said Kuntadi.
In addition to tracking and managing assets, the Prosecutor's Office also continues to optimize the auction of state confiscated goods so that their economic value is maintained and the results can be immediately returned for public benefit.
Through this approach, asset recovery is not only a part of law enforcement, but also an instrument to restore state losses and increase state revenue from the results of combating criminal acts.
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