After the founder of Canada's biggest cryptocurrency exchange, QuadrigaCX, died unexpectedly, about 115,000 clients have been unable to retrieve US$190 million (NZ$275 million) in funds - because the owner was the only one who knew the password to access holdings, the company said.
Gerald Cotten, 30, died of complications with Crohn's disease while doing philanthropic work in India in early December, according to a post on QuadrigaCX's Facebook page. The company didn't announce Cotten's death until more than a month after he died, and as customers panicked and tried to withdraw their funds, QuadrigaCX's website went down, and the company went off the grid.
When QuadrigaCX broke its silence a week later, the company revealed it had filed for creditor protection in the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, according to reporting from Coindesk.
Evidently, Cotten was the sole person responsible for transferring QuadrigaCX funds between the company's "cold wallet" - secure, offline storage - and its "hot wallet" or online server, according to court documents. Very little cryptocurrency was stored in the hot wallet for security purposes.
Cotten's laptop was encrypted, and his widow, Jennifer Robertson, and the expert she hired have been unable to access any of its contents. The company had no corporate bank accounts and used third-party services to manage payments and withdrawals.