Consider a continuous random walk $x (t) $, in which the velocity $v (t) = \mathrm dx/\mathrm dt $ rather than the position is described by Brownian motion, so that $v (t) = B_t $ where $B_{t+\epsilon} - B_t \sim \mathcal N (0,\epsilon^2) $. Given the initial position $x (0) = x_0$ and velocity $v (0) = v_0$, the distribution of position with time is nevertheless normally distributed, namely $x (T) \sim \mathcal N (x_0 + v_0T, T^3/3) $.
Suppose that at time $t=T$, the walker is known to have a particular velocity $v_T $, fixing a final boundary condition as well as an initial one. What then is the distribution of $x (T) $, and how does one approach the analysis?
(This question is a follow-up to a question I asked earlier about a random walk with speed boosts. As this sort of question appears easier to approach in a continuous time setting, that is the context I take in this case.)