Cryptopia Users Win New Zealand Ruling Over Locked Cryptocurrency as High Court Declares them "Property"

Customers of New Zealand-based Cryptopia exchange have received good news as the High Court of Christchurch has ruled that they are entitled to their funds that are being held on the cryptocurrency platform.  As a result of a hack last year in January, Cryptopia lost about 9.4% (US$17.85 million) of its total crypto holdings. Police still have not disclosed any real suspects throughout their investigation.

The crypto exchange tried to re-open two months later but was placed into liquidation in May 2019 as the breach had cost the exchange its reputation. In December 2019, Cryptopia employed Grant Thornton as a liquidator who later stated that the process of offering clients refunds would take some time because the recovery of the funds was a complex task.

Court rules in favor of Cryptopia clients

At long last, Cryptopia clients may be one step closer to recovering their funds. Justice David Gendall of the High Court in Christchurch, New Zealand, delivered a significant ruling that customers are entitled to the digital assets they held in Cryptopia accounts. Justice Gendall has officially admitted that the crypto assets held by the company’s liquidators don’t actually belong to Cryptopia because the firm was holding them on behalf of its clients. Thus, it gives customers the right to claim them back. But according to the ruling, liquidators will have the right to charge a fee for the liquidation of Cryptopia.  

In the 74-page landmark judgment, Justice Gendall said that cryptocurrencies are properties under the definition outlined in Schedule 2 of the country’s Companies Act of 1993. The High Court judge further stated that the cryptocurrencies mixed into co-mingle wallets are owned by the account holders and not assets of the company.

The legal battle before the High Court was between the customers of the exchange or the creditors of Cryptopia. The High Court judge sided with the former, as he classified cryptocurrency as property and not as simple debt.

While the $18 million stolen has not yet been traced, the crypto exchange continues holding crypto assets worth $101 million on the platform.

The ruling implies that Cryptopia’s liquidator can begin the process of returning clients’ funds. Grant Thornton has had a difficult task since he assumed his duties last year to find out which funds were held by specific customers to fast track the refund procedure. The process might have taken some time before customers’ refunds are credited. Clients’ funds were held in co-mingled wallets, something that breaches anti-money laundering requirements. This implied that customers would never receive their funds. But the New Zealand judge has finally thrown a lifeline to Cryptopia users.

The exchange owes more than 800,000 customers who are holding a positive coin balance in the crypto platform. The exchange’s 90 shareholders and 37 creditors also have been seeking reimbursements.

Crypto stolen due to lack of security

KPMG, one of the big four accounting firms, estimated that since 2017 over $9.8 billion in cryptos have been stolen by hackers because of poorly written code or security issues. Criminals use what is identified as “the dark web” to facilitate massive crypto theft. It is an easy act without any tech skill to carry out cybercrimes like ransomware. The necessary malware, which comes with customer service, costs as little as $1.04 but can cause huge damage. The dark web is accessible through special software that enables criminals to remain untraceable and anonymous.

Exchanges have become a key target for hacks, which have led to massive losses from customers. Criminals have been taking advantage of unregulated businesses, which are handling large sums of customers’ money. Although several exchanges have grown rapidly as trading has taken off, they don’t improve cybersecurity. The situation has created difficult questions for national governments regarding how to regulate the industry. Some nations, like the US, China, Russia, have taken a tough approach, while others have taken a laissez-faire approach.

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Creditors of Defunct Crypto Exchange Cryptopia Can Now File For Claims With Audit Firm Following Massive Hack

The creditors of now-defunct New Zealand based cryptocurrency exchange Cryptopia can now file for claims with appointed audit firm Grant Thornton. According to the official announcement released by the audit firm, emails have been sent to the concerned Cryptopia users who are expected to register using the Cryptopia claims portal which is now live.

What happened to Cryptopia?

Cryptopia was a New Zealand cryptocurrency exchange based in Christchurch that was founded by Rob Dawson and Adam Clark in 2014. The early entry of the exchange into the market was cut short when the exchange in January 2019 suffered a security breach which resulted in significant losses amounting to about $16 million. The exchange went into liquidation in May 2019. David Ruscoe and Russell Moore from Grant Thornton New Zealand were appointed liquidators of Cryptopia.

Since then, a lawsuit ensued in which Cryptopia’s customers sued the exchange in a bid to make available their locked-up funds. According to a Blockchain.news report back in April, Justice David Gendall of the High Court in Christchurch, New Zealand, delivered a significant ruling that customers are entitled to the digital assets they held in Cryptopia accounts. The ruling came in recognition of the fact that the exchange was indeed keeping custody of the assets for its customers.

Mishaps such as that suffered by Cryptopia is not uncommon in the cryptocurrency exchange ecosystem of today. From the Asset lock-up owing to the death of the owner of the Canadian-based cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX, to the recent hack of KuCoin exchange, the exchanges in the space are usually predisposed to one form of risk or the other.

While Cryptopia is getting set to make a refund of about $4.2 million according to a Grant Thornton estimation, QuadrigaCX made a settlement of CAD$12 million through Ernst & Young, the audit firm employed in the case. 

Former-Cryptopia Employee Pleads Guilty Stealing Over $171K in Crypto

A former male employee has pleaded guilty to steal over $171K in cryptocurrencies from a liquidated New Zealand-based crypto exchange Cryptopia, according to local media coverage Monday.

The unnamed male defendant admitted two charges through his lawyer, including committed theft crimes by “a person in a special relationship and theft over $700”. He then was convicted and remanded on bail until October for sentence from the court.

Cryptopia was liquidated in 2019 after over $165K worth of crypto was being hacked and stolen, representing 15% of its clients’ digital currency stock, the report said. Followed by a series of legal progress managed by an accountancy firm as a liquidator afterwards. The liquidator, however, discovered thirteen Bitcoins were unlawfully withdrawn from various digital crypto wallets. Two of the Bitcoin was put through a crypto mixer to conceal their provenance.

The defendant was accused with owning an unauthorised copy of private keys from Cryptopia’s numerous digital wallets, enabling him to hack various digital wallets and access in excess of $100 million New Zealand dollars in Crypto.

The ex-employee later confessed to committing illegal acts by stealing and owning another worth over $7000 in crypto. He claimed he had returned six Bitcoins and was willing to return the remaining stolen tokens if he were not prosecuted.

This is the biggest theft case in New Zealand history. The total amount of Bitcoin now is worth around $171K, according to the current price. 

“The defendant admitted that he was frustrated with Cryptopia but also motivated by the belief that he could get away with the theft as he thought nobody would ever check the old deposit wallets,” the summary of facts said. 

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