National Post

$260M at stake in crypto debacle

- Michael MacDonalD

HALIFAX • More than a dozen lawyers converged on a Halifax courtroom Thursday to make their pitches to represent creditors owed $260 million in the QuadrigaCX cryptocurr­ency debacle.

In all, three teams of lawyers have applied to the Nova Scotia Supreme Court to represent 115,000 cryptocurr­ency traders owed $70 million in cash and $190 million in Bitcoins and other digital assets.

Justice Michael Wood said he would issue a written decision within a week.

The law firms selected as so-called representa­tive counsel will work closely with affected QuadrigaCX users as a court-appointed monitor continues to look for the money they are owed.

The Vancouver-based exchange was shut down Jan. 28 following the sudden death of its CEO and sole director, 30-year-old Gerald Cotten. He had led his fiveyear-old business from his home north of Halifax.

Court documents say the $190 million in missing cryptocurr­ency is locked in off-line digital wallets — but they are beyond the reach of the company because Cotten was the only person who had the encrypted pass codes.

At one point during Thursday’s hearing, a lawyer representi­ng the monitor, Ernst and Young, said lawyers’ fees at this stage should be capped at $100,000.

Under a court order that granted QuadrigaCX protection from its creditors on Feb. 5, the company is required to pay all legal fees.

Maurice Chiasson, a lawyer representi­ng the embattled virtual company, admitted QuadrigaCX is already running out of money.

“As of today, we don’t have anything,” he said, later adding that more money is expected to be made available from Cotten’s widow, Jennifer Robertson.

Each of the competing teams of lawyers has representa­tives from one firm in Toronto and one in Halifax.

The first to file an applicatio­n was Bennett Jones of Toronto and Halifax-based McInnes Cooper. That team has already signed up 181 users who are owed about $22 million.

McInnes Cooper lawyer Benjamin Durnford said one of the key roles of the representa­tive counsel will be communicat­ing with affected users scattered around the world.

He said many of those users communicat­e through online chat sites, such as Reddit, where anonymous participan­ts often trade in rumour and innuendo.

“This is a case that must be litigated in the courtroom, not the chat room,” he said, taking aim at a law firm that has suggested users could be reached through online sites like Reddit and Telegram.

Bennett Jones lawyer Raj Sahni also said that was a bad idea.

“The use of chat rooms as a communicat­ion forum is inappropri­ate,” he told the court, suggesting these sites are rife with mischief and those promoting their own agendas. “They are not a secure forum.”

The law firms Miller Thomson in Toronto and Cox & Palmer in Halifax represent 252 creditors owed about $15 million.

Cox & Palmer partner Gavin MacDonald said the use of chat rooms was needed to “replace misinforma­tion with fact.”

“These chat rooms are a fact — people are using them extensivel­y,” he told the court. “Leaving it alone to fester is ... a bad idea.”

Meanwhile, Torontobas­ed Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt and Halifax-based Patterson Law represent 134 affected users owed about $19 million.

That team told the judge it had an advantage because one of its lawyers is considered an expert in cryptocurr­encies.

“We don’t need to familiariz­e ourselves with cryptocurr­ency,” said lawyer Evan Thomas, who specialize­s in blockchain technologi­es. “We already have that.”

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