Judge Confirms Ruling: Craig Wright to Forfeit 50% of Bitcoin Holdings
In a court document published Aug. 27, Judge Bruce Reinhart said Craig Wright argued in bad faith.
A corroborating order has been filed in Craig Wright’s sanctions and contempt hearing.
, Magistrate Judge Bruce E. Reinhart confirmed that Wright, the self-declared inventor of bitcoin, must forfeit half his crypto mined prior to 2014 to Ira Kleiman as well as half his intellectual property. Additionally, Wright is ordered to pay the attorney’s fees and related expenses incurred in this motion.
The court found Wright had argued in bad faith, perjured himself and admitted false evidence during the motion.
The ongoing trial began in 2018, when Kleiman – the brother of Wright’s late business partner Dave Kleiman – sued for half the bitcoin holdings in the so-called Tulip Trust, alleging that Wright defrauded the family's estate.
The magistrate said:
Accordingly, Wright’s argument – that the bitcoin is inaccessible due both to his former business partner’s death as well as a complicated encryption mechanism – was found to be in bad faith.
The sanctions are Wright's alone, Reinhart wrote.
"I find without hesitation that sanctions are not warranted against Dr. Wright’s counsel," the judge wrote, adding:
Jason Gottlieb, partner at Morrison Cohen LLP, said the ruling was “atypical” procedurally, and the district judge overseeing the trial may not accept Reinhart’s decision without amendment.
Previously, Wright’s testimony was declared to be “inconsistent” by District Judge Beth Bloom.
Kleiman was represented by Kyle Roche and Velvel Freedman of Roche Freedman LLP, while Wright was represented by Rivero Mestre LLP.
Kleiman must alert Wright of the appropriate costs due to him on or prior to Sept. 20. While this ruling does determine liability, further discovery for the trial may be underway.
Craig Wright image via CoinDesk archives