Law firms selected to represent users owed millions from QuadrigaCX platform
HALIFAX — Two law firms have been selected to represent users of the insolvent QuadrigaCX exchange who are owed about $260 million, most of it in cryptocurrency.
Justice Michael Wood of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court issued a decision Tuesday saying he had appointed Miller Thomson of Toronto and Halifax-based Cox & Palmer as representative counsel.
As of last week, the firms represented 252 creditors — all of them QuadrigaCX users — with claims amounting to about $15 million.
The Vancouver-based exchange was shut down Jan. 28 following the sudden death in December of its CEO and sole director, 30-year-old Gerald Cotten of Fall River, N.S.