Author

Topic: [2017-07-10] Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles Heads to Trial... (Read 4742 times)

legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1427
I think this fat con artist is eventually going to walk out freely knowing that he has a stash nearly worth $2 billion at todays rates. But even if he does get punished for what he did, then it will only result in up to five years of jail time (which is peanuts considering the mega size of the theft), or a fine of $4000 that he wipes his a** with. No wonder he isn't taking this entire trial seriously. I remember how I signed up there before all these problems started back in early 2013, but never used them due to their insanely high fees. If they didn't operate with such insane fees, I would have likely have been one of the plenty MtGox victims.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 1492
Everyone should know the whole history of MtGox. There are rumors that it was hacked and hundreds of thousands of bitcoins were stolen before it was sold to Mark Karpeles by Jed McCaleb. When Mark bought the exchange, he did not know that the exchange owes hundreds of thousands to MtGox users.

It was set to fail right from the very start.
hero member
Activity: 994
Merit: 515
Get'em boys
Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles Heads to Trial for Bitcoin Embezellement

Bitcoin exchange Mt Gox’s former CEO Mark Karpeles will go on trial next week in Tokyo, Japan to face embezzlement charges in the case of some 750,000 missing bitcoins, now worth over $1.85 billion.

Frenchman Mark Karpeles, who was released on bail a year ago from a Tokyo detention house will be expected to plead innocent, according to his laywer.

Speaking to AFP, Kiichi Iino, Karpeles’ lawyer, revealed that the former disgraced chief executive of what was once the world’s busiest bitcoin trading platform is keeping calm ahead of the trial.

Karpeles was first arrested in Tokyo in early August 2015 with allegations that he had manipulated bitcoin volumes at Mt Gox. After being in custody for a period of three weeks – the maximum time frame for suspects to be detained without formal charges in Japan – Karpeles was soon re-arrested the same month on charges of embezzlement. At the time, Karpeles was alleged to have stolen 321 million yen in bitcoin.

Mt Gox was notorious for its security snafus, suffering a hack as early as summer 2011. Those troubles continued through the years and when bitcoin reached a then-all-time-high near $1,300 in November 2013, Mt Gox stopped bitcoin withdrawals and claimed its vault of 850,000 bitcoins, about $500 million at the time, was plundered by a hack.

Blaming the incident due to “weakness in the system” in early 2014, Karpeles publicly appeared on television to apologize and state “the 750,000 bitcoins we kept for users, are almost all gone.”  His claim of the hack being the result of structural weakness of bitcoin was soon debunked.

Karpeles has also been accused of using customers’ bitcoins to fund a lavish lifestyle complete with a penthouse and prostitutes.

As things stand, a Tokyo court-appointed Trustee has completed a review of a total of 24,750 individual claims by creditors as the effort to reimburse Mt Gox creditors for their lost funds takes shape.

“I’ve not had any back yet but hopefully, eventually all the creditors will get a small percentage of their money back from the bankruptcy distribution,” British bitcoiner Kolin Burges told AFP.

Burges, who claims he lose several hundred bitcoins as a result of the collapse, added:

The charges [against Karpeles] only cover a subset of the issues which were happening at Mt Gox, so I don’t expect that we will find out most of the information we wanted to know.

If Karpeles is found guilty by a Japanese court – in a country which has one of the highest conviction rates in the world – he could face up to five years in prison or a fine of up to 500,000 yen ($4,000).

SOURCE: https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/mt-gox-ceo-mark-karpeles-heads-trial-bitcoin-embezellement/
Jump to: