Lawyers Ramp Up Pressure to Exhume Quadriga CEO's Body

Publicado en by Coindesk | Publicado en

Gerald Cotten, late CEO of QuadrigaCX, circa 2015, image via Decentral.

Lawyers representing the former users of the QuadrigaCX platform are doubling down on a formal request to exhume the exchange's founder's body.

Miller Thomson, the court-appointed representative counsel for Quadriga's former users, contacted Bill Blair, the public official responsible for overseeing the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, asking him to clarify whether the law enforcement agency investigating Quadriga's 2019 collapse would exhume founder Gerald Cotten's body in a letter emailed to creditors and posted to the law firm's website Tuesday.

The law firm first requested the RCMP exhume and autopsy last month, asking the agency to both confirm Cotten's body is indeed in his grave, as well as determine the cause of death.

"Today, Representative Counsel issued a letter to the Honorable Bill Blair, Canadian Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness, requesting an update on whether the RCMP will conduct an exhumation and post­mortem autopsy on the alleged body of Gerald Cotten prior to Spring 2020," the letter reads.

Tuesday's letter follows an update from Ernst & Young, the bankruptcy trustee for Quadriga.

The company, which was appointed by the Nova Scotia Supreme Court last year to consolidate Quadriga's crypto holdings, said Monday it was requesting a court approve nearly $640,000 CAD in expenses for cooperating with multiple federal agencies.

According to the report, EY spent $188,939 CAD between June 24, 2019, and Dec. 31, 2019, "In connection with the Law Enforcement Activities." In addition, Stikeman Elliott and Lenczner Slaght, law firms representing EY, charged $133,618 CAD and $314,599 CAD, respectively, over the same time period.

According to EY, much of this billing comes from analyzing 750,000 documents the company compiled into an "EDiscovery Database," which was then used to determine which documents met production demands from the various law enforcement agencies involved.

"This included utilizing the services of contract lawyers specialized in privilege review and available at a significantly lower billing rate than other professionals managing the overall Law Enforcement Activities."

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