Leaked Documents Suggest Mt. Gox Paid $200K to Parent Company in May
Published on July 7, 2014 at 15:13 BST
Controversy
surrounds a leaked report that bankrupt exchange Mt. Gox paid almost
$200,000 in fees to its parent company, Tibanne K.K., after the exchange
had filed for bankruptcy.
According to documents posted on the website goxdox.org, Tibanne,
the web services company also owned by Gox CEO Mark Karpeles, and which
shared the same office space, invoiced Mt. Gox on 26th May for
“services rendered”.
Those services included office rent, server fees and employee expenses. However, according to a Reuters report in March, Mt. Gox had no other full time employees besides Karpeles and everyone else worked on a one-year contract basis.
Trustee approved
The two Japanese-language invoices from May were approved for payment
from Mt. Gox’s remaining assets by the court-appointed bankruptcy
trustee, Nobuaki Kobayashi, and were issued during the company’s civil
rehabilitation timeframe. As trustee, Kobayashi has exclusive power to
administer and dispose of Mt. Gox assets.
In other alarming news, the documents, if genuine, reveal Mt. Gox’s
remaining funds total only $7.6m – significantly less than the $38m in
assets claimed in its bankruptcy application.
Additionally, a physical mailout to creditors notifying them of
proceedings also allegedly cost $85,000, even though the information had
already been posted on Mt Gox’s website.
These funds were not part of the 200,000 bitcoins recovered from what
was described as an “old style wallet” after an initial 850,000 BTC
went missing in an apparent hacking attack at some stage before
February. The recovered bitcoins are worth roughly $125m on markets today.
Frustration for community
The expense reports were met with disbelief from Japan’s bitcoin
community, many of whom lost money when Mt. Gox collapsed and some of
whom lost six-figure dollar equivalents.
The news is sure to raise tensions at a creditors’ meeting scheduled
for 23rd July in Tokyo, amid other reports Karpeles himself will attend.
There are rumors Karpeles himself is broke. A Wall Street Journal interview
last month revealed he is still living in his Tokyo apartment and
struggling to keep Tibanne operating with its remaining contract
employees.
Karpeles indicated he also trying to sell other assets belonging to
the firm, among them some lucrative domain name properties including
bitcoins.com.
There are still two groups in consultation with the court to try and
return creditors’ money by restarting the Mt. Gox business and operating
it once again as a bitcoin exchange.
They are Sunlot Holdings’ ‘savegox.com’ campaign and another group formerly backed by Chinese exchange OKCoin and its Tokyo-based partners