Maybe the $1.2m will be paid back in Bitcoin although it wasn't stated there but it will be logical for it to be done that way since their initial transaction was done via Bitcoin.
Repayment required by the court, is in cash equivalent of 22
BTC in 2021, and not in bitcoins.
The interior of a B.C. Supreme courtroom. A judge has ordered a B.C. man to repay $1.2 million as the cash equivalent of a 22 bitcoin loan. (Ben Nelms/CBC)
An article with more details
Bitcoin scheme leads to financial ruin, legal battle for B.C. menFirst let's see appealing words from Daniel, that are funny and unacceptable.
Meanwhile, Tambosso — who told the CBC he plans to appeal — claims he has also been left penniless, the victim of an "elaborate scam" that saw him borrow funds from Nguyen as he threw good money after bad in the hopes of unlocking a blockchain wallet worth billions.
"My intentions were genuine, with no desire to misappropriate his bitcoins," Tambosso wrote in an affidavit.
After reading through it, I saw reason why Mr. Hung Nguyen fell to this scam deal.
"Mr. Tambosso told Mr. Nguyen that the payoff could be huge: if the ... procedure was successful, Mr. Nguyen would receive 1,750 bitcoins as compensation for the loan," Fitzpatrick said.
Lending 22
BTC and when the deal completes, he will receive 1,750
BTC. This is too good to be true and as a cryptocurrency investor since 2017, how did Mr. Hung Nguyen fall to this scam deal?
A more interesting step but in Mr. Hung Nguyen's side, it's stupid. He believed in a screenshot that should never be a proof in cryptocurrency. If he needs proof, he will ask Daniel to sign a Bitcoin message with private key.
So did a "screenshot of a blockchain wallet (presumably that of Mr. Tambosso) showing a balance in excess of $5.2 billion in bitcoin."
Nguyen agreed to provide a short-term loan, and the two men signed a first contract for 18 bitcoins.