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Tidbits is a roundup of talking points from across the cryptosphere. In this edition, Jesse Powell offers to help the Canadian police investigate the supposed death of Quadrigacx CEO Gerald Cotten and the subsequent movement of funds. Also, the r/btc community teaches Iranian redditor Cdaemon how to keep his crypto safe. 

Also read: Canadian Exchange Insolvent After CEO Dies With Keys to $145M of Cryptocurrency

A Helping Hand

Kraken CEO Jesse Powell has offered to work with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in the investigation of Quadrigacx CEO Gerald Cotten’s supposed death and lost private keys. Powell went on to explain that Kraken knows thousands of wallet addresses that belong to Quadrigacx.

The reactions to Cotten’s demise have been mixed. Some believe the CEO actually died, while others believed he faked his own death. Commentator “I am Nomad” argued that Cotten probably did die, on the basis that death is common in the backwoods of India. However, Powell was dissatisfied with this response and remained suspicious given that Quadrigacx was having problems with fiat and crypto withdrawals in the month leading up to Cotten’s death.

To make the case that Cotten probably faked his own death, Twitter user Ken A posted a video of a person easily buying a fake death certificate in India for just 25,000 rupees or $450. After seeing the video, Powell was amazed at the ease of getting an official-looking yet fake death certificate in India.

r/btc Gives Iranian Bitcoiner Advice

On r/btc, Iranian bitcoiner Cdaemon lamented the loss his lifesavings on Bittrex after the exchange froze his account. Cdaemon explained that he left his funds on the exchange because he was unable to purchase hardware wallets to store his cryptocurrency in 2017 due to sanctions against Iran. Prior to using Bittrex and having his account frozen, Cdaemon claimed to have confirmed with Bittrex customer support that Iranians could use their exchange.

Tidbits: Kraken CEO Offers Help in Quadrigacx Case, Iranian Bitcoiner Learns Expensive LessonWhile many redditors sympathized with Cdaemon, they also questioned why he would keep his cryptocurrency on an exchange and not in his own wallet. One commentator pyalot explained that there are plenty of desktop, mobile and paper wallets for bitcoin. In response, Cdaemon incorrectly argued that these options didn’t exist back in 2017. Pyalot corrected Cdaemon, and then explained the mantra of “not your keys, not your bitcoin.”

Further down the thread, Cdaemon argued that he was unable to access online wallets as they also adhered to U.S. sanction laws back in 2017. In response, commentator Maeler argued that the U.S. has no sanction on wallets and Cdaemon could have easily downloaded and used the Bitcoin.com wallet.

What do you think of the speculation that Gerald Cotten faked his own death? Let us know in the comments below. 


Images courtesy of Shutterstock.


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Tags in this story
BCH, Bitcoin.com, Bittrex, Cdaemon, crypto, Customer Support, death certificate, Desktop, Fiat, Gerald Cotten, India, Iranian, Jesse Powell, Ken A, Mobile, N-Featured, Paper Wallets, pyalot, QuadrigaCX, rupees, Sanctions, Withdrawals

Marcel Chuo

Marcel Chuo majored in Economics with a minor in Social Justice. He has a background working in finance as well as technology startups. Bitcoin and blockchain technology is his passion.



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