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Mt Gox Creditors Are Preparing to Claim for Bitcoin Repayments

Mt gox creditors are preparing to claim for bitcoin repayments

Mt Gox Creditors Are Preparing to Claim for Bitcoin Repayments

Mt gox creditors are preparing to claim for bitcoin repayments

A group of creditors of the defunct bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox have started preparing to claim for bitcoin repayments following a court’s decision in June.

Lawyers representing several Mt. Gox creditors – who filed a petition in November to move Mt. Gox out of bankruptcy and into a process of civil rehabilitation – on Thursday published an updated proposal for the process.

The lawyers released an initial basic policy for the plan on June 29, just one week after a court in Tokyo approved creditors’ civil rehabilitation petition from late last year.

The policy stated in June that it would be “appropriate” to repay creditors who deposited BTC and BCH with Mt. Gox in BTC and BCH instead of cash.

In the latest update, the lawyers further asserted that it will be desirable that these “BTC and BCH be sent to exchanges in which many creditors have accounts or can open accounts easily,” adding:

“We are of the opinion that most of the assets, including approximately 166,000 BTC and 168,000 of BCH and other derivatives currently held by Mt. Gox, should be paid to creditors at the time of the first payment.”

And those assets could be worth over $1.3 billion, based on latest data from CoinDesk’s price index.

The revised policy stated that the first payment to creditors is expected to start in May or June in 2019, if a rehablitation plan can be approved.

Currently, the lawyers representing the group of creditors are seeking further comments before a formal rehabilitation plan can be finalized and presented to the court by February of next year.

In addition, the revised proposal stated that cryptocurrencies other than BTC and BCH held by Mt. Gox should be liquidated into cash and paid to creditors since their prices could fluctuate significantly with security risks.

Mt Gox, once the world’s largest bitcoin exchange by trading volume, declared bankruptcy in 2014 after over 744,000 BTC were stolen. Subsequently, creditors went into a years-long process in a bid to claim for repayments.

Yet, amid bitcoin’s spiking price towards $20,000 late last year, a group of creditors filed a petition to the bankruptcy court in Tokyo to move the case into a process of civil rehabilitation.

At that time, Mt. Gox’s trustee was holding 202,195 bitcoins and then liquidated over 30,000 of them into cash in March 2018. The court’s approval of the civil rehabilitation petition means that Mt. Gox will no longer need to liquidate any BTC or BCH assets.

Nobuaki Kobayashi, the rehabilitation trustee for Mt. Gox, said in July that a new system for creditors filing proofs for claiming repayments is expected to be released in August.

Japanese yen and bitcoin image via Shutterstock

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

Published at Fri, 03 Aug 2018 06:33:48 +0000

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Russian National Arrested in Greece with Ties to Money Laundering, BTC-e, Mt. Gox Theft

Alexander Vinnik, 38, has been arrested in Greece on a U.S. warrant. While he is suspected of running one of the largest online money laundering operations, additional reports are emerging naming him as the mastermind behind the Mt. Gox heist that sent bitcoin spiraling out of control in 2013.


The Man Behind the BTC-e Exchange

For almost seven years, BTC-e has operated as one of the oldest digital currency exchanges in the world. During that entire time, the people behind the company have been completely anonymous.

Until today.

The alleged mastermind behind a multi-billion dollar money laundering scheme and, according to sources close to the exchange, a key person behind BTC-e has been unmasked as Alexander Vinnik, a Russian national who was arrested today in Greece. Vinnik is wanted in the United States on suspicion of money laundering at least $4 billion USD through bitcoin transactions.

Vinnik is currently being held in custody by Greek authorities pending a U.S. extradition request.

Greek police have stated:

An internationally sought ‘mastermind’ of a crime organization has been arrested. Since 2011 the 38-year-old has been running a criminal organization which administers one of the most important websites of electronic crime in the world.

With Vinnik’s extradition, the U.S. investigation will go into full swing. This is the latest in a series of U.S. efforts to curb cybercrime worldwide. Last week, a multi-national coordinated raid involving the U.S. and several other countries resulted in the takedown of the Darknet site known as Alphabay.

BTC-e have long been known for their lax regulations user identity verification and their uncooperative nature when it comes to anti-money laundering organizations. Perhaps coincidentally, the exchange has conspicuously been offline since last Thursday, with the website currently citing “unscheduled maintenance” as the cause of the interruption of service.

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A feed of tweets from the BTC-e is on the site as well to keep users informed.

Ties to the Mt. Gox bitcoin Hack

Vinnik was also found to be in control of a sizable number of Bitcoins that could possibly be traced back to the hack of the Mt. Gox exchange back in 2013. A group of security experts known as WizSec published a blog post earlier today detailing how the hack took place. The group maintains that Vinnik has been their prime suspect in their years-long investigation into the bitcoin theft and that the same conclusions about his involvement were made independently by other teams working to uncover what really happened.

WizSec explains:

In September 2011, the MtGox hot wallet private keys were stolen, in a case of a simple copied wallet.dat file. This gave the hacker access to a sizable number of bitcoins immediately, but also were able to spend the incoming trickle of bitcoins deposited to any of the addresses contained. […] By mid-2013 when the funds spendable from the compromised keys had slowed to a near halt, the thief had taken out about 630,000 BTC from MtGox.

Mt. Gox Where is Our Money

Not only can the Mt. Gox coins be traced to Vinnik, but other less known heists can be traced to him as well.

According to WizSec:

Coins stolen from Bitcoinica, Bitfloor and several other thefts from back in 2011 and 2012 were all laundered through the same wallets.

Vinnik has denied all accusations against him in a Greek court of law. More information on this story will surely be released in the coming days, so make sure to stay tuned.

Do you think that Vinnik will be extradited to the States? Or will other countries try and lay their claim to prosecute? Let us know in the comments below, and make sure to check back at Bitcoinist.com for more information on this story as it unfolds.


Images courtesy of Japan Times, Reuters/Alexandros Avramidis, Shutterstock

The post Russian National Arrested in Greece with Ties to Money Laundering, BTC-e, Mt. Gox Theft appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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