Lawyers for QuadrigaCX clients request exhumation of late founder’s remains
HALIFAX — Lawyers for clients who lost millions in the bankruptcy of the QuadrigaCX cryptocurrency exchange have formally asked the RCMP to exhume the remains of the firm’s founder.
In a letter posted to its website Friday, Toronto-based law firm Miller Thomson LLP asks the RCMP’s Commercial Crimes Branch to conduct an autopsy on the body of Gerald Cotten to confirm both its identity and the cause of death.
The lawyers write there is a need for certainty around their clients’ question of whether “Mr. Cotten is in fact deceased” and it asks that the exhumation process be completed by the spring of 2020.
Cotten, who ran the exchange from his home outside of Halifax, died suddenly in December 2018 while travelling in India.