{"id":16411,"date":"2019-08-16T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-08-16T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/crypto-economy.com\/quadrigacxs-collapse-victims-are-getting-frustrated-with-miller-thomson-and-ey-demanding-answers\/"},"modified":"2023-08-30T09:02:15","modified_gmt":"2023-08-30T09:02:15","slug":"quadrigacxs-collapse-victims-are-getting-frustrated-with-miller-thomson-and-ey-demanding-answers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/crypto-economy.com\/quadrigacxs-collapse-victims-are-getting-frustrated-with-miller-thomson-and-ey-demanding-answers\/","title":{"rendered":"QuadrigaCX\u2019s Collapse Victims are getting Frustrated with Miller Thomson and EY: Demanding Answers"},"content":{"rendered":"
Victims are getting out of hope with court-appointed law firms, demanding answers about the effort made to recover their funds. After the virtually overnight collapse of QuadrigaCX<\/a><\/strong>, the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia appointed four auditor companies to recover funds and as counsel to represent these customer\u2019s interests. One of these company Ernst and Young (EY) accidentally moved more than 100 bitcoins into a cold storage wallet it couldn\u2019t access. Still, the company is unable to give any clear explanation on this blunder.<\/p>\n This drama began at the start of 2019, after the death of the exchange\u2019s CEO and founder, Gerald Cotton, when he was traveling in India due to complications arising from Crohn\u2019s disease. This news was more worrying for the exchange\u2019s users as they were already not getting their money out more than a month after the cryptocurrency exchange won a court dispute that had held up $19 million of funds.<\/p>\n The exchange\u2019s officials said that QuadrigaCX<\/a><\/strong> was working through a backlog of withdrawal requests and had set daily withdrawal limits and also, they were processing withdrawals slowly and that the team is actively working on having the funds deposited and distributed.<\/p>\n