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I've been fascinated by this case for years. Gerald Cotten was the most visible face of the Canadian crypto world in the early 2010s, the guy who seemed to have it all: money, influence, vision. He co-founded QuadrigaCX in 2013 when Bitcoin was still a fringe asset, and the platform became Canada's largest exchange. But here’s the strange part: while the world knew Cotten as the visionary bringing Bitcoin to the masses, he was practically the only one controlling the private keys to the cold storage funds. A single point of failure in a system handling hundreds of millions.
In December 2018, Cotten traveled to India with his wife. Supposedly it was their honeymoon. Days later, he was dead. The official cause: complications from Crohn’s disease. But the details didn’t add up. His body was embalmed quickly, without an autopsy. And then came the blow: QuadrigaCX collapsed. $215 millions in Bitcoin and other assets simply vanished. Investors couldn’t access anything.
The most suspicious part was the timing. Gerald Cotten had updated his will just days before his death, leaving everything to his wife. Coincidence? Some doubted it. The crypto community exploded with theories. Had Cotten faked his death and escaped with the funds? Was QuadrigaCX a Ponzi scheme from the start, with Cotten’s death the final act? Investigators uncovered millions in hidden transactions, suggesting Cotten had been moving money before disappearing.
Thousands of people lost their savings. Canadian authorities investigated, but the money never reappeared. In 2021, investors demanded that Cotten’s body be exhumed to confirm he was truly dead. It never happened. To this day, the case remains one of the darkest mysteries in crypto, a reminder of why you should never trust all your money to a single person, no matter how charismatic they are.