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I just revived one of the most disturbing cases in crypto history, and honestly, it remains chilling. Everything started when Gerald Cotten, the CEO of the Canadian exchange QuadrigaCX, decided to travel to India on his honeymoon with his wife at the end of 2018. He was young, charismatic, a multimillionaire in the crypto world — seemingly had it all. But on December 9th, at just 30 years old, he was declared dead at a hospital in Jaipur due to Crohn's complications.
Up to that point, it sounds like a common personal tragedy. What happened afterward is where the story gets completely crazy. Days after his death, QuadrigaCX simply collapses. And here’s the serious part: Cotten was the only person with access to the cold wallets where over $250 million in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies were stored. 115,000 customers. No backups. No shared passwords. Nothing.
Canada went into panic. The crypto community went into panic. Because then strange details started to emerge. Investigators discovered that Gerald Cotten had moved assets between personal and company wallets before he died. The hospital where he passed away was private. The death certificate was incomplete. Devastated customers began demanding the exhumation of the body, claiming it was all a staged fraud.
The conspiracy theory exploded: what if Gerald Cotten was never really dead? What if he simply disappeared with the money using mixers, tax havens, and offshore wallets? Netflix eventually released a documentary because the question no one can answer is too juicy: where is the money? Where is Gerald?
This case obsesses me because it exposes something fundamental that many still don’t understand about crypto. A single man can be the central bank, the safe, and the thief — all at the same time. QuadrigaCX became a warning that no one should ignore. When you entrust all your wealth to a platform controlled by just one person without security protocols, you’re playing Russian roulette. And 115,000 people learned this in the worst way possible.