Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Investigation of QuadrigaCX Cryptocurrency Debacle Turns Up $28 Million In Assets

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2019 07:45 PM
  • Investigation of QuadrigaCX Cryptocurrency Debacle Turns Up $28 Million In Assets

HALIFAX — The accounting firm trying to recover more than $200 million owed to users of the now-defunct QuadrigaCX cryptocurrency platform has turned up only $28 million in assets — virtually all of it in cash.

 

Ernst and Young, which is overseeing bankruptcy proceedings, has issued a preliminary report saying it may not be possible to complete a full review of QuadrigaCX's finances, given the poor state of the company's bookkeeping.


The report says the investigation has also been hampered by a lack of co-operation from some of QuadrigaCX's business partners and the sheer volume of transactions under scrutiny, which number in the millions.


The accounting firm says that as of last month, QuadrigaCX and its associated holding companies owed 76,000 creditors a total of $215.7 million.


The online exchange offered an unregulated platform for users to store and trade digital assets like Bitcoin, Litecoin and Ethereum.


Vancouver-based QuadrigaCX was shut down in January after its founder and sole director, 30-year-old Gerald Cotten of Fall River, N.S., died Dec. 9 while travelling in India.


The entire enterprise was thrown into a tailspin when it was revealed Cotten was the only person who knew the passwords to gain access to the company's offline cryptocurrency reserves.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau Says Country Must Talk About How And Where To Rebuild After Floods

Trudeau Says Country Must Talk About How And Where To Rebuild After Floods
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau didn't close the door Sunday on using federal dollars to help relocate communities facing the recurring threat of severe flooding.    

Trudeau Says Country Must Talk About How And Where To Rebuild After Floods

Mother, Daughter Missing: Calgary Police Say Suspect May Have Burned Evidence

CALGARY — Police say a suspect in the disappearance of a missing Calgary woman and her toddler daughter may have tried to get rid of evidence.    

Mother, Daughter Missing: Calgary Police Say Suspect May Have Burned Evidence

Catalan Leader Goes To Court After Canada Refuses Him Entry For Speaking Visit

MONTREAL — A Quebec nationalist group is claiming the Canadian government revoked a travel permit for the exiled former president of Spain's Catalonia region.

Catalan Leader Goes To Court After Canada Refuses Him Entry For Speaking Visit

BC SPCA Says It Has Identified Person Who Abandoned Newborn Kittens In Dumpster

BC SPCA Says It Has Identified Person Who Abandoned Newborn Kittens In Dumpster
The BC SPCA says in a news release that the day-old kittens were tied in a plastic shopping bag that read "Love You," and were found among garbage in a locked, underground area on April 19.    

BC SPCA Says It Has Identified Person Who Abandoned Newborn Kittens In Dumpster

12-Day-Old Goat Stolen During Snuggle Event At Vancouver Island Farm, Owners Say

LADYSMITH, B.C. — The owners of a Vancouver Island farm say one of their baby goats was stolen during an event where people can visit and snuggle with the cuddly animals.    

12-Day-Old Goat Stolen During Snuggle Event At Vancouver Island Farm, Owners Say

Soaking Wet Arrest After Baby Allegedly Grabbed In Bizarre Kelowna, B.C. Incident

Mounties say in a release that a family was walking with the baby through a waterfront park near the downtown core around 2:30 p.m. Sunday when the baby was grabbed.

Soaking Wet Arrest After Baby Allegedly Grabbed In Bizarre Kelowna, B.C. Incident