Australian Craig Wright, who claimed as a bitcoin inventor in 2016, has been sued by the family of his former business partner. It's up to ten billion dollars.
In May 2016, the Australian Craig Wright outed as alleged Bitcoin inventor. That he was the legendary Satoshi Nakamoto, should prove cryptographically encrypted messages with keys from the early days of Bitcoin development. The search for Mr. Bitcoin continued after that - and could now be finally clarified in a lawsuit.
For although Wright may not have invented Bitcoin himself, at least not alone, he is one of the pioneers and first miners of the cryptocurrency. The family of his deceased business partner Dave Kleiman in 2013 wants to bring Wright now in court. It is allegedly from Wright stolen Bitcoins from the Kleiman estate worth up to $ 10 billion, as Motherboard reported.
As early as March 2008, seven months before the publication of the Bitcoin whitepaper, Kleiman and Wright are said to have communicated about the development of a cryptocurrency. After Kleiman's death, Wright wrote in an e-mail to his father that Dave and he were two-thirds the inventors of Bitcoin. Wright and Kleiman also announced their own transaction just nine days after the very first transaction on the Bitcoin blockchain.
Bitcoin pioneer in court: It's about ten billion dollars
What is the trial about? Kleiman and Wright co-founded a company called W & K Info Defense Research, which developed Bitcoin-based technologies from 2011 to 2013. As part of this company, the two have also mined bitcoins - the lawyers assume from 300,000 to 1.1 million units. Wright is said to have cheated on these bitcoins of Kleiman's heirs after his death by overwriting the company with his fake papers in his name.
The lawsuit also states that Wright had previously agreed with Kleiman's brother Ira that if they did not go public with the sensitive issue, they would pay the family their due assets. The money had never arrived. Craig Wright has not commented on the allegations in the lawsuit. Probably the Bitcoin pioneer will only defend himself in court.