Former
CEO of collapsed Mt.Gox bitcoin exchange arrested in Japan: reports
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[August 01, 2015]
TOKYO (Reuters) - Mark Karpeles, the
former head of defunct bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox, was arrested on
Saturday in connection with the disappearance of hundreds of millions of
dollars worth of the virtual currency, Japanese media reports said.
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The French-born Karpeles, 30, is suspected of falsifying data on
the outstanding balance of the exchange, at one point the world's
largest hub for trading the digital currency, they added.
Police were unable to immediately confirm the reports.
When it filed for bankruptcy in February 2014, Mt. Gox said 750,000
customer bitcoins and another 100,000 belonging to the exchange were
stolen due to a software security flaw.
The lost funds represented the equivalent of $480 million at the
time of the bankruptcy filing. Mt. Gox also said more than $27
million was missing from its Japanese bank accounts.
Karpeles, who had blamed hackers for the loss, later said he had
recovered 200,000 of the lost bitcoins.
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Known as a self-proclaimed geek who said he was uncomfortable in his
native France and hadn't been back in years, Karpeles became
interested in bitcoin when a customer of his web-hosting services
wanted to pay in the virtual currency.
Mt. Gox subsequently shot from obscurity to dominate global trade in
bitcoin, but as early as 2012 employees at the Tokyo-based exchange
challenged Karpeles on issues such as whether client money was being
used to cover costs.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies)
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