Japan: 132 Crypto Investors Sue Hacked Exchange Coincheck, Seek Reimbursement

Published at: March 1, 2018

132 crypto investors have filed a lawsuit against the Japanese-based crypto exchange Coincheck, seeking 228 mln yen (around $2 mln) in damages, local news outlet Sankei reported Tuesday Feb. 27.

Coincheck suffered a major hack in late January that resulted in the theft of more than 523 mln NEM, worth around $530 mln at the time. The exchange has since promised to refund all of its customers in full at a rate of about 82 cents per token.

Despite the company’s refund promise, ten crypto traders had already filed lawsuits against Coincheck on Feb. 15 at the Tokyo District Court over the company freezing crypto withdrawals. Coincheck began allowing yen withdrawals on Feb. 12, which settled one of the claims against the exchange.

At the time of the Feb. 15 lawsuit, the traders’ lawyer, Hiromu Mochizuki, told Reuters that a new lawsuit to claim damages for the hack may be forthcoming. This newest lawsuit with 132 claimants seeks payment in 13 types of currency, including yen, Sankei reports.

Mochizuki’s Twitter bio describes him as the “Secretary General of Coincheck Damage Counterparty Lawyer,” and he often links to the Twitter page of the so-called “Coincheck Damaging Countermeasure Defense Team.”

According to their Twitter, the Coincheck Damaging Countermeasure Team filed the Feb. 27 lawsuit on behalf of the 132 defendants. A video from TV Asahi posted Feb. 27 shows Mochizuki blaming the hack on Coincheck’s “neglected security measures”.

The “Coincheck Damaging Countermeasure Team” recently posted on Twitter that the amount being sought in the case is more than twice that which was reported by Sankei. On February 27, they stated that the amount of damages exceeded 490 mln yen (more than $4 mln).  

Since the January hack, Japanese regulators have begun conducting inspections of unregistered Japanese crypto exchanges, including Coincheck, verifying their computer safety measures and evaluating the management of customer assets.

Tags
Nem
Related Posts
Japan: Crypto Exchange Coincheck Resumes NEM Trading Almost 10 Months After Major Hack
Recently re-opened Japanese crypto exchange Coincheck has announced it has resumed NEM (XEM) crypto token trading after a restructuring of its platform by external “security experts,” South Korean news outlet FNNews reports Nov. 13. In January of this year, Coincheck suffered an industry record-breaking hack when $534 million worth of NEM was stolen from its wallets. This latest development from Coincheck reveals the exchange has “joined the Japan Security Association and is “ready to renovate its image.” Alongside NEM trades, the platform has also opened support for Ethereum (ETH) and Lisk (LSK). Coincheck is quoted as saying that "technological safety …
Trading / Nov. 13, 2018
Japan’s Self-Regulatory Crypto Exchange Body to Release Voluntary Rules, Report Says
Japan’s Virtual Currency Exchange Association (JVCEA) will reportedly be releasing new voluntary rules next week, Cointelegraph Japan reports today, June 18. The official announcement of the regulatory guidelines, set for June 27th, will reportedly include a ban on insider trading, penalizing cryptocurrency exchange employees if they engage in “inappropriate” trading due to their firsthand knowledge. In order to conform to anti-money laundering (AML) regulations, the voluntary regulation proposal will also prohibit the trading of anonymity-oriented cryptocurrencies, such as Monero and Zcash, on exchanges. Formed at the end of April following the $530 mln NEM hack of Japanese crypto exchange Coincheck, …
Altcoin / June 18, 2018
Hacked Crypto Exchange Coincheck Confirms Removal of Four Anonymity-Focused Altcoins
Recently hacked Japanese crypto exchange Coincheck will end trading for four privacy-oriented cryptocurrencies, Monero (XMR), Zcash (ZEC), Dash (DASH), and Augur (REP), Cointelegraph Japan reported May 18. Following reports from back in March, the exchange has now officially confirmed the removal of the four anonymity-focused coins will come into effect June 18. According to Coincheck’s blog, the exchange will remove the four cryptocurrencies to comply with counter-terrorist financing (CFT) and anti-money laundering (AML) measures recently issued by Japan’s financial regulator, the Financial Services Agency (FSA). The FSA has been especially active in regulating domestic crypto exchanges, specifically around customer protection, …
United States / May 20, 2018
Monex’s Coincheck Vs Mt. Gox: Can Traditional Finance Save A Hacked Crypto Exchange?
The aftermath of the January 26 hack of more than $500 mln worth of NEM from Japanese crypto exchange Coincheck has led to a regulatory re-examination of Japan’s crypto industry, so far culminating in the $33.5 mln sale of the hacked exchange to Japanese financial services provider Monex Group. Japan had been one of the leading countries in crypto adoption when it legalized Bitcoin as a payment method a year ago. The move was made in part to prevent another hacking incident such as that of the now defunct Japanese crypto exchange Mt. Gox — arguably the most infamous, and …
Altcoin / April 8, 2018
Japanese Banks Launching Digital Currencies Could Inspire the Traditional Cash Society
Japan is known as a land of contrasts. A country where serenity and tranquillity can be found in the middle of the hustle and bustle of large global cities, where proud traditionalism stands side-by-side with the developers and innovators of breakthrough technologies, where kimonos are often found next to the latest fashion trends. This contradictory tendency is no different in Japan’s cryptocurrency ecosystem. It ranks as one of the top crypto-friendly nations on Earth, with favorable and forward-thinking cryptocurrency regulations. They made Bitcoin legal tender in 2017, and at one point, the Japanese yen dominated the buying and trading of …
Bitcoin / Jan. 7, 2019