Gerald Cotten died on his honeymoon in India.



He was 30 years old.

And he was the only person who knew the passwords.

$190 million in customer funds. Gone overnight. No backup. No recovery plan. No second person with access to anything.

Just a dead CEO and a cold wallet nobody could open.

That was the official story anyway.

Then investigators started digging.

When they finally located Quadriga's cold wallets — the ones supposedly holding all that customer money — they were empty.

Not recently emptied. Not hacked.

Empty for a long time.

Turns out Gerald had been quietly moving customer funds into his personal accounts for years. Running Canada's biggest crypto exchange by day. Draining it from the inside every night.

Nobody noticed. Nobody checked. Everyone just trusted him.

Here's where it gets stranger.

His body was never properly examined. Buried quickly. When authorities later requested an exhumation to confirm the cause of death — the family said no.

No investigation ever fully closed the case.

And those cold wallets? Some of the blockchain activity around them happened after Gerald was supposedly already dead.

I'm not saying he faked his death.

But I'm not saying he didn't either.

The money is gone. The wallets were empty before he died. The body was buried fast. And to this day nobody has a clean answer for any of it.

Tragic accident — or the most perfectly executed exit in crypto history?

Some stories don't have endings. This is one of them. 👇

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