Breaking: Lawyers Might Sell QuadrigaCX to Settle Debts

Published at: Feb. 5, 2019

A court-ordered lawyer will get the encrypted laptop of recently deceased CEO of major Canadian crypto exchange QuadrigaCX Gerald Cotten, Canadian broadcast network CBC reports Tuesday, Feb. 5.

According to CBC, the laptop that might provide access to $190 million of QuadrigaCX customer funds will be given to a monitor — an independent third party who is appointed by the court to monitor the company's operations during bankruptcy procedures. According to Jack Julian, CBC's reporter who is attending the hearing in Nova Scotia’s court today, Feb. 5, the laptop was previously held by QuadrigaCX representatives.

As the assets were stored in a cold wallet, the court believes that the QuadrigaCX case is not a typical bankruptcy. The creditors might consider changing the jurisdiction to proceed with the case, Julian writes in his Twitter, citing the monitor.

CBC’s reporter also adds that QuadrigaCX has asked for a 30-day stay of proceedings — which will end on Mar. 7 — to search for the $190 million that is apparently inaccesible following Cotten's death. In case the keys are not found, the lawyers representing QuadrigaCX are considering selling the company in order to satisfy the debts.

Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX has faced financial difficulty since its CEO Gerald Cotten reportedly died of complications from Crohn’s disease in December 2018.

As some of the customers have expressed their concerns about Cotten’s death, Coindesk has recently published a death certificate, issued by the Government of Rajasthan’s Directorate of Economics and Statistics, which was obtained from an informed source. It states that Gerald William Cotten died on Dec. 9, and Jennifer Robertson is mentioned as his widow.

According to a January affidavit filed by Cotten’s wife, the exchange apparently has no access to its wallets, and the CEO had not left evidence of passwords. The reported number of users affected is 115,000, with around $250 million CAD ($190 million USD) in cryptocurrency and fiat currency lost.

Tags
Related Posts
Ernst & Young Argues That Crypto Exchange QuadrigaCX Should Be Placed in Bankruptcy
Big Four audit firm Ernst & Young (EY) has argued that the now-shuttered Canadian crypto exchange QuadrigaCX should be placed in bankruptcy instead of being restructured as part of ongoing creditor protection proceedings. EY proposed the course of action in its “Fourth Report of the Monitor” filed with the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia on April 1. As previously reported, QuadrigaCX reported it had lost access to its cold wallet holdings following the death of its founder, Gerald Cotten, in December 2018 — Cotten having ostensibly been the sole person with access to the wallets’ corresponding keys. With the reportedly …
Altcoin / April 2, 2019
QuadrigaCX’s Legal Representatives Create Affected Users Committee
A new committee appointed by law firms Miller Thomson and Cox & Palmer will provide guidance in representing affected clients of major Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX. The development was announced in a court notice on March 19. In the filing, Miller Thompson reveals that it has established the Official Committee of Affected Users of now-shuttered QuadrigaCX, comprising of seven users affected by the shutdown of the trading platform following the sudden death of its co-founder, Gerald Cotten, last December. At the time, the exchange reported that it was not able to access its cold wallet holdings, as Cotten had purportedly …
Altcoin / March 20, 2019
Widow of QuadrigaCX Founder Seeks Compensation for Creditor Protection Court Costs
The widow of the founder of now-defunct cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX has asked the court for $225,000 in compensation for legal costs, Bloomberg reports on March 4. Jennifer Robertson, the wife of late QuadrigaCX founder Gerry Cotten, is seeking repayment for financing used to help the crypto exchange acquire court-approved protection from creditors. After $145 million in crypto assets went missing following Cotten’s death, Robertson provided interim financing for legal proceedings. According to Bloomberg, Robertson paid CA$300,000 (~$225,000), which covered Big Four audit firm Ernst & Young’s (EY) appointment as a monitor to the legal proceedings, in addition to fees associated …
Altcoin / March 5, 2019
Crypto Exchange Kraken Offers $100,000 Reward for QuadrigaCX’s Missing Funds
Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken has posted a $100,000 reward for the discovery of the major Canadian crypto exchange QuadrigaCX’s missing funds. Kraken announced the offer in a blog post on Feb. 28. QuadrigaCX has faced financial difficulty following the sudden death of its founder Gerry Cotten in December last year. Since then, Quadriga has not been able to access its cold wallets where it kept most of the assets, because Cotten was apparently solely responsible for the wallets and corresponding keys. Quadriga purportedly only has CA$375,000 ($286,000) in cash, while it owes CA$260 million ($198,435,000) to its users. Facing insolvency, the …
Altcoin / Feb. 28, 2019
From Last-Minute Will to Past Banking Problems: What Makes the QuadrigaCX Case Seem So Strange
For the second week, QuadrigaCX’s crisis remains one of the hottest topics in the crypto world. After the CEO of the Canadian exchange, 30-year-old Geral Cotten, suddenly died, the exchange has allegedly lost access to its cold wallets, where as much as 190 million Canadian dollars ($145 million) in digital assets were stored. The firm has since managed to obtain creditor protection in the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, which has granted it with a 30-day stay of proceedings under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) — which will end on March 7 — to search for the missing funds. According …
Altcoin / Feb. 13, 2019