Well, he has been claiming to own them. So the court ordered him to hand over half. I guess he could now try to convince the court that he doesn't own them.
If he was though, it'd have various implications such as it not being difficult to prove he had access to his own private keys.
I can imagine you might be the guy and not want to prove it, or it to be known. But actively claiming to be the guy and not proving it indisputibly when you could... what'd be the point?
Besides having private keys to early wallets, my #1 reason to not believe him is his arrogance and loving attention. The Nakamoto(s) that wrote the white paper and spoke on forums about it was/were very anonymous and privacy-obsessed.
Wright tried to prove that he doesn't control the bitcoins he mined prior to 2013 due to blind trusts, secret sharing schemes and various other excuses. The court ruled that this story is hogwash.
The actual situation is this: Wright does not control those bitcoins, because he is not Satoshi Nakamoto, just a conman.
He tried to explain the fact that he can't control them with the nonsense story about blind trusts, which the court soundly rejected for being a very obvious lie.
The court never decided on whether or not he was Satoshi Nakamoto, as both parties are happy to proceed on the assumption that he is.
"Reinhart said at the start of his ruling the court “is not required to decide, and does not decide” whether Wright is Nakamoto, and the court was not required to decide and did not decide how much bitcoin Wright controls today."
"I completely reject Dr. Wright’s
testimony about the alleged Tulip Trust, the alleged encrypted file, and his alleged inability to
identify his bitcoin holdings.
Dr. Wright’s story not only was not supported by other evidence in the record, it defies
common sense and real-life experience."
The Judge goes on to dismantle Wrights claims. He does not believe one bit of this fairy tail.
He claims to have them, but not have access to them, as part of a team who invented BTC. This court case awards half of his alleged holdings to the beneficiaries of the estate of his alleged partner.
His ownership of the coins or the validity of his claim to be Satoshi never came up in this case AFAICT...
This is absurd on so many levels. For example, it's pretty obvious that Bitcoin cannot be valued based on its exchange price in such huge quantities - if any party decided to sell $5bn worth of BTC, the price would obviously go down dramatically at this point. What's the logic behind this order?
There are indeed many absurd things about this case, but that's not one of them: the value of anything will collapse if you try to sell a significant fraction of the world's total supply at once.
I agree, although this is not the point to which your original post, and my concurring post, respond. Had the court ordered liquidation--of bitcoin, hogs, apartment blocks, whatever--it seems unlikely that market volatility would stay the court's hand. (Again, we agree about this.)
They're not ordering him to hand over cash they're ordering him to hand over half the BTC. The cash amount is just there to illustrate just how much 'value' that many coins would have.
(IANAL) The headline is misleading. From the court order:
"the Court deems the following facts to be established for purposes of this action: (1) Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine bitcoin; (2) any Bitcoin-related intellectual property developed by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death was property of the partnership, (3) all bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death (“the partnership’s bitcoin”) was property of the partnership when mined; and (4) Plaintiffs presently retain an ownership interest in the partnership’s bitcoin, and any assets traceable to them".
Also from the order (and quoted in the article): "The Court also is not required to decide, and does not decide,how much bitcoin, if any, Dr. Wright controls today. For purposes of this proceeding, the Court accepts Dr. Wright’s representation that he controlled (directly or indirectly) some bitcoin on December 31, 2013, and that he continues to control some today."
In other words, Kleiman's estate gets half of some indeterminate amount of bitcoin that Wright mined prior to Kleiman's death. Which as well may be zero, not $5bn.
> In other words, Kleiman's estate gets half of some indeterminate amount of bitcoin that Wright mined prior to Kleiman's death. Which as well may be zero, not $5bn.
If Wright is in legal field, I suppose he is in some way forced to make his Bitcoin sell orders public (taxes, anti-laundering regulations etc). So that it is very much decidable, even if not how much he owns, but how much he is spending and when these particular Bitcoins were created.
Agreed, but this is something that I suppose will be determined in the future proceedings. So it is incorrect to say "Wright is ordered to hand over $5bn". To be fair, the headline states "up to $5bn" which is technically correct but still misleading because this "up to" part is not something that one notices immediately :)
Forget whether he actually has any bitcoin—there's no way he (or anyone else) would just hand over 500 000 coins just because some local judge said so. That's the whole point of bitcoin: It can't be confiscated. 500k BTC is enough to buy many lifetimes of freedom somewhere on the planet, even if you are wanted dead or alive in a first world country.
It can't be confiscated if you manage to keep it completely hidden since the second it was mined... just like any other currency. In some ways Bitcoin is a lot more traceable than regular money, which can change hands as cash repeatedly with no traceability.
If a court asks you to hand over something and you refuse you might as well spend time in prison until you have a change of heart. You can be compelled to produce the wallet and since transactions are traceable it's possible to calculate how much BTC was mined.
Unless the BTC was mined into an obscure wallet that can't be traced back to this guy there's no easy (any?) way to hide how much he mined. Because this isn't about how much BTC the guy controls now (he could just transfer it all and claim there's none left) but how much was mined.
Nah, even if you know someone controls the coins you can't confiscate them. You can put the person in jail, you can torture them - sure. But until they spit out the key you can't take the coins you know they have.
Right, but that's the whole point. You don't get to just live on the lam because you are rich. You have to actually pull it off. If you wait until they throw you in jail for contempt of court, it's too late. At that point your choices are comply or rot in jail. You can say that's a special feature of Bitcoin, but it isn't. It's the same with gold bullion or cash that you've hidden.
In the US people are already serving indefinite prison sentences for being in contempt until they comply with a court order [0]. This is an open ended sentence.
But the claim made above was that the whole point of BTC is that it cannot be confiscated. In reality it can be confiscated to the same extent to which any currency/valuable can be confiscated. You can't confiscate things you don't know about or can't get to and this is applicable to anything: money in hidden off shore accounts, art in an obscure warehouse, jewelry buried under a house, etc.
Contempt of court is considered an ongoing act, meaning that the person in contempt can be held indefinitely until they are no longer in contempt of court.
The difference with btc is that the act of confiscation becomes extracting a passphrase stored in one's mind instead of moving physical atoms. Historically physical assets have been seized countless times.
>That's the whole point of bitcoin: It can't be confiscated
Sure, if you rob a bank and bury the money it can't be confiscated either.
However, if you are ordered by a Court to turn over funds (bitcoin or otherwise) and you do not comply with the court order, you can be held in contempt of court and arrested until you comply with the court order.
What good is "many lifetimes of freedom" if you only have 1 life and you're not free?
First of all there is no debtor's prison in the USA. Even if he unequivocally had and owed 500k btc, he could just say no and go about his business. But even if this was a criminal case, the only way the government can get his coins would be:
- torture
- imprisonment and then finding his private keys written down in his house (or similar opsec fail)
This is in contrast to bank/financial accounts (easily garnished by court order), physical paper currency (easily seized by a SWAT team), or physical gold (easily seized by a SWAT team).
They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
>First of all there is no debtor's prison in the USA.
Who said debtor's prison?
There is a difference between going to jail for a debt and violating a court order, even if that court order is to turn over assets. Why don't you look up the penalties for violating a court order (HINT: civil or criminal the remedies are the same). In fact not only can violating a court order from a civil court result in imprisonment, additional criminal charges can occur for the violation itself, so you can be sitting in jail anyway and be hit with criminal charges.
>he could just say no and go about his business.
You think you can just ignore a court order without penalty? Why would anyone comply with a court order then? I'll tell you why, because they Courts have broad powers including imprisonment until you comply (even orders from civil cases).
>They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
Yes, I think I acknowledged that, just as they can't take the cash you robbed from a bank and buried either (notwithstanding your point about how easy it is to seize). How is SWAT going to seize cash that they can't find?
First of all there is no debtor's prison in the USA. Even if he unequivocally had and owed 500k btc, he could just say no and go about his business. But even if this was a criminal case, the only way the government can get his coins would be:
This is simply wrong. It's not an issue of "debtor's prison" it's an issue of being in contempt of court by failing to comply with a court order.
If this was a criminal case, the government would need to pursue a separate action to seize the coins because criminal cases can't result in the seizure of property, only fines and imprisonment. (When police seize property, that's a separate but related civil case to the criminal case.)
They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
This is true, but they can keep you in jail for as long as you are in contempt of court, i.e., the rest of your life.
It depends what you consider freedom. To many, being restricted only to areas outside the reach of an international arrest warrant or extradition arrangement would be a form of incarceration.
> 500k BTC is enough to buy many lifetimes of freedom somewhere on the planet
That's debatable. How do you even go about liquidating that much cryptocurrency? Selling it all at once would crash the market; even signalling that such a large amount might be put on the market would probably have an adverse effect on prices.
It doesn't take a full 5 billion USD to escape the country and avoid prosecution. It probably doesn't even take 5 million. When you have that much money, none of the normal rules apply. Really, having 5 billion in New York City versus, say, Ukraine isn't really that much of a difference.
It seems like the heirs of the other guy are finding legal ways to rob an insane person. It's gross the judge has not apparantly even considered this. Wright is a pathological liar. He makes stuff up constantly to get attention. Although this is a huge flaw, it's unreasonable to allow this to create facts for some other party that weren't proven in the normal way, ie a written contract.
The legal presumptions is that adult persons are able to stand in court and tell the truth. Declaring someone insane (is this even possible in civil cases?) is intentionally hard and must not be used to protect notorious liars.
It's not the plaintiffs fault that Wright sticks to these highly unlikely and susceptible claims. If he is unwilling (because he fears possible sanctions) to come straight, it is own doing.
Maybe he got caught in his own web of lies (an investigation by the Australian tax is mentioned in the order) and sees no way to step back. Maybe he fears the shame of being exposed. Who knows.
I'm sure there is ample legal precedence to establish partnerships and shares in common property in situations without a formal agreement.
The comment I replied to complained that the court did not consider that Wright is a "pathological liar" who constantly seeks attention.
The order makes it clear that the court did consider this... against Wright. The Judge writes
"During his testimony, Dr. Wright’s demeanor did not impress me as someone who was
telling the truth. When it was favorable to him, Dr. Wright appeared to have an excellent memory
and a scrupulous attention to detail. Otherwise, Dr. Wright was belligerent and evasive."
That does not sound like someone unable to understand what he is saying.
He sued W&K for 20-40 odd million for bitcoin he lent to the partnership, but in lieu of that asked instead for "Bitcoin" IP. This was all done in Australian jurisdiction. He then used the IP as leverage to acquire Australian R&D grants and was almost awarded a significant amount but instead raised alarm bells. ATO/police cracked down, and somehow Wright got involved with other conmen that paid off the remaining ATO debts - and is still trying to prove to the courts he's Satoshi so he can get a bunch of patents through to start suing virtually everyone in the cryptocurrency space (I'm guessing anyway). That's why he's adamant about claiming to be Satoshi rather than give up in court.
54 comments
[ 2.5 ms ] story [ 112 ms ] threadEdit: My statement is incorrect. The amount of bitcoins Craig Wright has access to was not determined in the case, but potentially could be none.
I can imagine you might be the guy and not want to prove it, or it to be known. But actively claiming to be the guy and not proving it indisputibly when you could... what'd be the point?
He tried to explain the fact that he can't control them with the nonsense story about blind trusts, which the court soundly rejected for being a very obvious lie.
The court never decided on whether or not he was Satoshi Nakamoto, as both parties are happy to proceed on the assumption that he is.
"Reinhart said at the start of his ruling the court “is not required to decide, and does not decide” whether Wright is Nakamoto, and the court was not required to decide and did not decide how much bitcoin Wright controls today."
"I completely reject Dr. Wright’s testimony about the alleged Tulip Trust, the alleged encrypted file, and his alleged inability to identify his bitcoin holdings.
Dr. Wright’s story not only was not supported by other evidence in the record, it defies common sense and real-life experience."
The Judge goes on to dismantle Wrights claims. He does not believe one bit of this fairy tail.
His ownership of the coins or the validity of his claim to be Satoshi never came up in this case AFAICT...
Full court ruling: https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536...
"the Court deems the following facts to be established for purposes of this action: (1) Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine bitcoin; (2) any Bitcoin-related intellectual property developed by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death was property of the partnership, (3) all bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman’s death (“the partnership’s bitcoin”) was property of the partnership when mined; and (4) Plaintiffs presently retain an ownership interest in the partnership’s bitcoin, and any assets traceable to them".
Also from the order (and quoted in the article): "The Court also is not required to decide, and does not decide,how much bitcoin, if any, Dr. Wright controls today. For purposes of this proceeding, the Court accepts Dr. Wright’s representation that he controlled (directly or indirectly) some bitcoin on December 31, 2013, and that he continues to control some today."
In other words, Kleiman's estate gets half of some indeterminate amount of bitcoin that Wright mined prior to Kleiman's death. Which as well may be zero, not $5bn.
If Wright is in legal field, I suppose he is in some way forced to make his Bitcoin sell orders public (taxes, anti-laundering regulations etc). So that it is very much decidable, even if not how much he owns, but how much he is spending and when these particular Bitcoins were created.
It can't be confiscated if you manage to keep it completely hidden since the second it was mined... just like any other currency. In some ways Bitcoin is a lot more traceable than regular money, which can change hands as cash repeatedly with no traceability.
If a court asks you to hand over something and you refuse you might as well spend time in prison until you have a change of heart. You can be compelled to produce the wallet and since transactions are traceable it's possible to calculate how much BTC was mined.
Unless the BTC was mined into an obscure wallet that can't be traced back to this guy there's no easy (any?) way to hide how much he mined. Because this isn't about how much BTC the guy controls now (he could just transfer it all and claim there's none left) but how much was mined.
But the claim made above was that the whole point of BTC is that it cannot be confiscated. In reality it can be confiscated to the same extent to which any currency/valuable can be confiscated. You can't confiscate things you don't know about or can't get to and this is applicable to anything: money in hidden off shore accounts, art in an obscure warehouse, jewelry buried under a house, etc.
[0] https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/mar/23/francis-r...
See e.g., Chelsea Manning.
Sure, if you rob a bank and bury the money it can't be confiscated either.
However, if you are ordered by a Court to turn over funds (bitcoin or otherwise) and you do not comply with the court order, you can be held in contempt of court and arrested until you comply with the court order.
What good is "many lifetimes of freedom" if you only have 1 life and you're not free?
- torture
- imprisonment and then finding his private keys written down in his house (or similar opsec fail)
This is in contrast to bank/financial accounts (easily garnished by court order), physical paper currency (easily seized by a SWAT team), or physical gold (easily seized by a SWAT team).
They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
Who said debtor's prison?
There is a difference between going to jail for a debt and violating a court order, even if that court order is to turn over assets. Why don't you look up the penalties for violating a court order (HINT: civil or criminal the remedies are the same). In fact not only can violating a court order from a civil court result in imprisonment, additional criminal charges can occur for the violation itself, so you can be sitting in jail anyway and be hit with criminal charges.
>he could just say no and go about his business.
You think you can just ignore a court order without penalty? Why would anyone comply with a court order then? I'll tell you why, because they Courts have broad powers including imprisonment until you comply (even orders from civil cases).
>They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
Yes, I think I acknowledged that, just as they can't take the cash you robbed from a bank and buried either (notwithstanding your point about how easy it is to seize). How is SWAT going to seize cash that they can't find?
This is simply wrong. It's not an issue of "debtor's prison" it's an issue of being in contempt of court by failing to comply with a court order.
If this was a criminal case, the government would need to pursue a separate action to seize the coins because criminal cases can't result in the seizure of property, only fines and imprisonment. (When police seize property, that's a separate but related civil case to the criminal case.)
They can put you in jail, but they can't take your btc.
This is true, but they can keep you in jail for as long as you are in contempt of court, i.e., the rest of your life.
That's debatable. How do you even go about liquidating that much cryptocurrency? Selling it all at once would crash the market; even signalling that such a large amount might be put on the market would probably have an adverse effect on prices.
It's not the plaintiffs fault that Wright sticks to these highly unlikely and susceptible claims. If he is unwilling (because he fears possible sanctions) to come straight, it is own doing.
Maybe he got caught in his own web of lies (an investigation by the Australian tax is mentioned in the order) and sees no way to step back. Maybe he fears the shame of being exposed. Who knows.
I'm sure there is ample legal precedence to establish partnerships and shares in common property in situations without a formal agreement.
The order makes it clear that the court did consider this... against Wright. The Judge writes
"During his testimony, Dr. Wright’s demeanor did not impress me as someone who was telling the truth. When it was favorable to him, Dr. Wright appeared to have an excellent memory and a scrupulous attention to detail. Otherwise, Dr. Wright was belligerent and evasive."
That does not sound like someone unable to understand what he is saying.
Courts in the US don't examine fact claims that are not in genuine controversy between the parties, so they can't exercise judgement when doing so.
He sued W&K for 20-40 odd million for bitcoin he lent to the partnership, but in lieu of that asked instead for "Bitcoin" IP. This was all done in Australian jurisdiction. He then used the IP as leverage to acquire Australian R&D grants and was almost awarded a significant amount but instead raised alarm bells. ATO/police cracked down, and somehow Wright got involved with other conmen that paid off the remaining ATO debts - and is still trying to prove to the courts he's Satoshi so he can get a bunch of patents through to start suing virtually everyone in the cryptocurrency space (I'm guessing anyway). That's why he's adamant about claiming to be Satoshi rather than give up in court.
Anyway, that's my take.
Like?
- Flee to another country?
- Admit he's not Satoshi?
- Claim the trust "malfunctioned"?
- Appeal?
Do these ultimately boil down to flee the country, or get jailed for contempt?