Kleiman v. Wright: $65 Billion Bitcoin Case Has Started (yahoo.com) 77
UnknowingFool writes: The civil trial of Ira Kleiman vs. Craig Wright started on Monday in Miami. The estate of David Kleiman is suing Craig Wright, the self declared inventor of bitcoin, for 50% ownership of 1.1 million bitcoins. The estate claims Kleiman was in a partnership with Wright to mine the coins but after Kleiman died in April 2013, Wright denied any partnership. At over $60,000 each per bitcoin, this case is currently worth $65 billion.
Craig Wright has previously claimed he is the inventor of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, which has been met with skepticism based on his inability to show any proof. In this case, Wright has made numerous dubious claims. After the case was filed in 2018, Wright claimed he did not have the keys to the coins but that they would be arriving in January 2020 through a "bonded courier." After January 2020, Wright provided keys to the estate for verification which the estate claims the bitcoins were fake. Expressing skepticism that the courier even existed, the estate asked for more information about the courier. Wright then claimed the identity of the courier and all communications were protected under attorney-client privilege as the courier was an attorney.
Craig Wright has previously claimed he is the inventor of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, which has been met with skepticism based on his inability to show any proof. In this case, Wright has made numerous dubious claims. After the case was filed in 2018, Wright claimed he did not have the keys to the coins but that they would be arriving in January 2020 through a "bonded courier." After January 2020, Wright provided keys to the estate for verification which the estate claims the bitcoins were fake. Expressing skepticism that the courier even existed, the estate asked for more information about the courier. Wright then claimed the identity of the courier and all communications were protected under attorney-client privilege as the courier was an attorney.
My attorney (Score:5, Funny)
When he said he went to Brown I did not realize he meant UPS.
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That's racist.
Only to those engaging in imaginary victimization, to others its the color of a UPS uniform and/or truck. Its actually color as brand. Brown for UPS, Blue for IBM, ...
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Craig Wright: The courier is my ass and it's delivering a load right into the courtroom.
sorry what? (Score:2)
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if wright is not satoshi, how does the kleiman estate sue him for satoshi's 1.1m bitcoin??
Wright maintains his claim; judge says "hand over 550,000 bitcoins OR $32.5 billion, your choice".
The anal reaming that is about to take place here is gonna bring tears to the eyes of everyone watching it.
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The anal reaming that is about to take place here is gonna bring tears to the eyes of everyone watching it.
Tears of laughter, mostly.
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Especially if I decided to transfer a few satoshis from that address to show that he's not Satoshi after all...
Actually, maybe he deserves to be on the hook for $32.5 billion for making that ludicrous false claim, so I'll wait a bit longer.
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Wow, the beggars are really ambitious these days. I remember when they used to ask for a buck.
Why would he do that? (Score:2)
Why would he give them the option of providing to him $32.5B in useless, icky, doomed, fiat currency?
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It can't be both useless and also worth $32B. I can think of at least 7 uses for that much money.
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Especially when the recipients of all that bitcoin get a really big fucking bill from the IRS.\
You couldn't settle this mess privately, so now it's settled publicly, and that means government gets a peek at it all.
Re:sorry what? (Score:4, Informative)
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If he says _in court_ he is Satoshi, then this is fact as far as the court is concerned, and he may have to pay. If he says _in court_ that he is just a stupid little liar trying to make himself look important, then the other side would have to prove it, and that would be difficult.
But isn't this a lose-lose situation for Wright? If he continues to claim he is Satoshi, he's on the hook for billions. If he backs down, he's a laughing stock.
Unless, of course, I'm missing something.
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It's only perjury if he lies under oath. If he lies in press releases or on the Internet, it's no different than many other press releases, and the vast majority of shit posted to the Internet.
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If he hasn't actually been placed under oath, then it's not perjury. It could be other crimes - false report, forgery, etc.
Perjury is very specifically about testifying falsely in a legal proceeding - be it under oath in front of Congress, in a deposition, on a sworn statement / affidavit, on signed legal forms that declare that knowingly submitting false information would be penalized as perjury (tax forms, etc.), or on the witness stand in a trial.
Perhaps some of the paperwork necessary to get to where t
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Not exactly. The plaintiff indirectly claims Wright is Satoshi. A great defense would have been that Wright denies he is Satoshi and forcing the plaintiff to prove he is. The claim is this: David Kleiman was in a partnership with Wright in the early days of Bitcoin to mine coins around the same time Satoshi was mining his coins. Wright claims he is Satoshi who is known to own 1.1 million coins. Thus Kleiman helped Wright/Satoshi mine those coins.
Wright in his defense could say that he mined other coins than
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Is there a contract somewhere that says "Satoshi" was partners with the dead guy and promised him half?
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Re:sorry what? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Do you have a link to the story?
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https://www.independent.co.uk/... [independent.co.uk]
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That's the link I was finding but wasn't sure. The original Satoshi wallets are known and haven't budged.
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Does this "Satoshi account" have a single wallet address?
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I guess I asked the wrong thing.
How do we know which wallet adresses are owned by "Satoshi"?
Re:sorry what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Because he claims to be.
His end-game is that the court rules in his favor, and he can go around slightly twisting the facts and then claiming that he is Satoshi, and a court has confirmed his identity. (not strictly speaking true, but that's how conmen work - slightly twisting the truth of the court ACCEPTING his claim at face value into the court CONFIRMING his claim, and lay people wouldn't spot the difference)
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Adopt German law (Score:4, Interesting)
Next, if you did this and 6.5 million dollars instead of 65 billion, to the court you lost 99.99% of your case, so you pay 99.99% of the court fees and the lawyer cost.
Somehow that stops these kind of idiotic demands happening in Germany.
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So, what if somebody screws you over, and takes you for all you have got - how are you ever going to have the financial means to fight them in court?
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No different than anywhere else, really... might be more explicit, but in all western nations you are entitled to exactly as much justice as you can afford.
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You can have legal insurance that will cover it.
If you don't have that, there are various ways of legal support, especially for low-income people.
I also think (but on this one I'm not sure) the court can simply waive the fees.
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So, what if somebody screws you over, and takes you for all you have got - how are you ever going to have the financial means to fight them in court?
Absolutely. The German justice system has never thought of that possibility. Not in 150 years.
Of course not, you idiot. If someone takes you for all you've got, you go to a lawyer, and he will advice you and figure out a way to get your own back. If you make ridiculous claims for 65 billions, you're stuck.
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Everyone I knows has legal insurance. It's usually bundled with something. Personally I have it with my bank fees, 1EUR a month goes to legal insurance to cover the legal costs of defending such a one sided court application. My best friend has it as a rider on his car insurance.
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That's great for limiting the scenario of 2 ultra rich parties suing each other over nonsense.
What happens when you're a young widow with a baby suing a megacorp because their product killed your husband?
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You're not suing for 65 billion.
Also, most Germans have legal insurance that would cover such a case, if they look at the facts and conclude that you have a chance to win.
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Some of us are DCs, you insensitive clod!
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There are also additional programs for the poor, including free legal consultation and free representation in court. It's a bit more paperwork to get there and you need to show your income and all to proof that you qualify.
Depending on what you are suing for, there are also organisations that support you (such as a union if you are in work law court, etc.)
Finally, in some courts (not all, it depends on the area of law) you can represent yourself, at least at the initial stage (before any appeals, etc.) so t
Fake bitcoins ? (Score:2)
The summery says:
" After January 2020, Wright provided keys to the estate for verification which the estate claims the bitcoins were fake."
Fake bitcoins ? If there is something that can be easily checked for genuineness is Bitcoin.
First you can point at a public address and show the bitcoins are there. No way to fake this.
Then you can prove you own the key to that address if you are asked to send out a specific amount to a specific address.
No one can fake this.
How can they not be sure ?
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Not sure how feasible that mig
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In ECDSA if you don't hash the plaintext yourself it's easy to substitute any fake key.
See here [stackexchange.com].
Now all you need is a judge who is also a cryptographer to get justice.
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In ECDSA if you don't hash the plaintext yourself it's easy to substitute any fake key.
That's true... but in any cryptosystem if you don't hash the plaintext yourself then you're not verifying that the message was correctly signed. The "plaintext" here could merely be a hash of the actual message, but if it's completely unknown then the signature is useless.
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Or an expert witness or three that can testify to that fact, which is far more plausible.
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First you can point at a public address and show the bitcoins are there. No way to fake this
And if someone provides fictitious addresses? Would they not be fake?
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You can check any address on the blockchain here:
https://www.blockchain.com/exp... [blockchain.com]
It will tell you if it's real or not, and the balance of BTC it holds, plus past transactions.. Then if you want to prove you own the private key to that address, ask your challenger to tell you to transfer a specific amount of BTC to another specific address, do that in front of him within the next 5 min, if you receive the amount, then you know the person has the private key. And you will see the transaction recorded on http [blockchain.com]
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Re: Fake bitcoins ? (Score:2)
Yes, I understand. And that's why I'm wondering why they still argue about this, Bitcoin authenticity is rather black and white, there is no in-between. It's probably all fuzzy because of lawyers and big money involved.
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Privilege this (Score:5, Interesting)
Wright then claimed the identity of the courier and all communications were protected under attorney-client privilege as the courier was an attorney.
Bzzzt! Try again. The attorney-client privilege is to protect the client, not the attorney. He can release all that if he wishes.
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For that matter, the attorney's name would probably have to be not shieldable, to prove it is an attorney.
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If this argument was valid, law school would be full of criminals and mobsters. Ok, well...now I'm not actually sure.
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This is legally interesting, but . . .
The identity of the courier is not protected under privilege even if he/she is an attorney.
The courier is responsible for several links in the chain of custody and must be able to sign applicable affidavits.
Even if this courier were Wright's attorney, he/she must attest to delivering something; he/she probably can claim that any discussion of the contents prior to delivery is protected/privileged.
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what possible reason could he have to NOT waive privilege. regardless the attorney's name is not considered privileged information. If the story is true then he has every reason to waive any privilege and absolutely none to keep it.
Privilege is the default. The defendant does not have to list reasons why he will not waive privilege. Again I am skeptical that this courier even existed.
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All that & bitcoin still has no actual use cas (Score:1)
It's high time that tech sites stopped being fooled into believing in a pyramid scheme just because it's a tech pyramid scheme. These things are as old as the hills. But at least when people were paying stupid prices for tulip bulbs there was the chance of growing a nice flower after you'd been left with a rapidly depreciating asset, rather than on a planet w
So (Score:2)
I'd settle for half a billion. I am not greedy
Missed the important part (Score:3)
FTA:
According to Ira Kleiman, his late brother David – a fellow computer expert and longtime friend of Wright – was the co-creator of Bitcoin and is entitled to a share of a trove of bitcoin currently valued at $66 billion.
[...]
Furthermore, there are some in the crypto community who question whether the 1.1 million bitcoins at the heart of this case even exist. In a blog post from 2018, Tokyo-based software developer and self-proclaimed “Bitcoin archaeologist” Kim Nilsson traced wallet addresses supposedly held by Wright, tying many of them back to the 2014 Mt Gox hack.
I'm curious to know what evidence Ira Kleiman has for his brother being a co-creator of Bitcoin, or if he's just playing off of Wright's claim (since if Wright claims to be Satoshi then Wright's partner is a co-creator).
I'm also highly dubious that Wright has access to 1.1 million bitcoins.
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or if he's just playing off of Wright's claim
Fraudsters normally keep good company. Let them go to town. At least the lawyer (who are for a change the least evil people in this fight) can get rich.
Bonded courier? (Score:2)