Ottawa Citizen

Law firms chosen for users owed $260M by QuadrigaCX

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HALIFAX Two law firms have been selected to represent users of the insolvent QuadrigaCX exchange who are owed about $260 million, most of it in cryptocurr­ency.

Justice Michael Wood of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court issued a decision Tuesday saying he had appointed Miller Thomson of Toronto and Halifax-based Cox & Palmer as representa­tive counsel.

As of last week, the firms represente­d 252 creditors — all of them QuadrigaCX users — with claims amounting to about $15 million.

The Vancouver-based exchange was shut down Jan. 28 following the sudden death in December of its CEO and sole director, 30-year-old Gerald Cotten of Fall River, N.S.

Court documents say $190 million in missing Bitcoins and other cryptocurr­ency is locked in offline digital wallets — but they remain beyond the reach of the company because Cotten was the only person who had the encrypted pass codes. Another $70 million in cash is owed to users, much of it tied up in bank drafts held by third-party payment processors.

In his decision Tuesday, Wood said Miller Thomson and Cox & Palmer have extensive experience with insolvency cases under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangemen­t Act (CCAA), and he noted that Miller Thomson has expertise when it comes to cryptocurr­ency.

The main goals for the representa­tive counsel are to make the proceeding­s efficient and cost effective, while providing clear lines of communicat­ion with the users, Wood said.

He endorsed the team’s communicat­ion strategy, which includes the use of social media and online discussion groups like Reddit to reach 115,000 affected users. “The rationale is that users are already discussing the Quadriga issue in those places, and it is important to have accurate informatio­n available to them,” Wood said.

Cotten’s widow, Jennifer Robertson, has committed $300,000 to the court process, which requires Quadriga to pay all of the legal fees. Robertson holds a controllin­g interest in the company, an arrangemen­t spelled out in Cotten’s will. She remains the sole secured creditor.

“This CCAA proceeding is unique in the sense that there is no operating business of any significan­t size in terms of physical assets, employees, third-party suppliers or secured creditors,” Wood said in his decision. “There is, however, a very large group of diverse users who have no access to many millions of dollars in assets” given to QuadrigaCX, he said.

Wood said the two law firms and the court-appointed monitor overseeing the case, Ernst & Young, will be asked to select users to join a committee that will help the monitor and the lawyers.

“The business is currently suspended, and may never resume, although that remains to be determined,” the judge said. “The biggest task for the monitor will be to locate and recover the applicants’ assets.”

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