A 33-year-old man lost his life savings after getting involved with a cryptocurrency trader who died, taking the password to access funds to the grave, IgbereTV reports
Tong Zou is one of thousands of customers left seriously out of pocket following Gerald ‘Gerry’ Cotten‘s mysterious death in 2018 at the age of 30.
Zou trusted Quadriga CX, Canada’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, with C$500,000.
A big chunk of it was given to him by his parents.
But when co-founder Cotten died during a honeymoon in India, the money was seemingly lost forever.
The shocking story has been recounted in a new Netflix documentary, Trust No One: The Hunt For The Crypto King.
“It just makes me more depressed about it,” Zou told Sky News.
“I could have invested it in real estate. I could have put it in stocks.
“So far, nothing’s been found. It sucks.”
Quadriga’s accounts are estimated to have held $250 million.
An official investigation concluded that Quadriga was “an old-fashioned fraud wrapped in modern technology”.
Some 76,000 investors like Zou collectively lost out.
At first, the now-closed company allegedly blamed the delay on a legal issue with a bank.
“I kept asking them: Where’s my money? – October, November, December – during all that time,” he said.
“They kept saying it was the lawsuit.
“I couldn’t get any sleep. I just prayed. I really prayed it wasn’t a scam.
“My parents were worried about it too.
“At that time, there was nothing I could do. There was no way of getting my money back.
“Once I deposited it, it was basically gone.”
Some speculate that Cotten, who suffered with Crohn’s disease, might actually be alive.
He died just nine days into his honeymoon due to an acute stomach ache.
His wife Jennifer Robertson said he had promised to create a mechanism that turned the passwords over to her when he died.
She says she never received the passwords