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CEO of bitcoin exchange MtGox pleads not guilty to embezzlement

Mark Karpeles, chief executive of MtGox, attends a news conference at the Tokyo District Court in Tokyo February 28, 2014. Picture: REUTERS
Mark Karpeles, chief executive of MtGox, attends a news conference at the Tokyo District Court in Tokyo February 28, 2014. Picture: REUTERS

Tokyo — The 32-year-old CEO of defunct MtGox pleaded not guilty on Tuesday to charges relating to the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bitcoins and cash from what was once the world’s biggest bitcoin exchange.

French national Mark Karpeles filed the plea in response to charges of embezzlement and data manipulation at the Tokyo District Court, according to a pool report for foreign journalists.

MtGox once handled 80% of the world’s bitcoin trades but filed for bankruptcy in 2014 after losing about 850,000 bitcoins — then worth about half a billion US dollars — and $28m in cash from its Japanese bank accounts.

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In its bankruptcy filing, Tokyo-based MtGox blamed hackers for the lost bitcoins, pointing to a software security flaw.

MtGox subsequently said it had found 200,000 of the missing bitcoins.

Prosecutors said Karpeles transferred about ¥340m ($3m) from an account containing customer funds to an external account during September to December 2013, and increased the balance of the account via "improper operation" of MtGox’s trading system, the Nikkei business daily reported on Tuesday, citing Karpeles’ indictment.

Karpeles’s defence told a pre-trial consultation that the remittance was within the scope of the firm’s revenue and not the embezzlement of customer funds, the Nikkei reported. They added that the increased balance was part of the administrative process of exchanging cash and bitcoins and therefore not illegal, the Nikkei said.

Karpeles told the court he was an information technology engineer.

"I swear to God that I am innocent," he said in Japanese to the three-judge panel hearing his case, according to the pool report.

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The collapse of MtGox represented a major setback for bitcoin and badly damaged the image of virtual currencies, particularly among risk-averse Japanese investors and corporations.

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But the bankruptcy also prompted Japan’s government to decide how to treat bitcoin, and preceded a push by local regulators to licence virtual currency exchanges.

Japan this year became the first country to regulate exchanges at the national level, part of a government effort to exploit financial technology as a means of stimulating the economy.

Interest in bitcoin among Japan’s legions of individual investors — encouraged by Tokyo’s recognition of the virtual currency as legal tender — has spiked in recent months.

Still, institutional investors remain wary, say those running virtual currency exchanges in Tokyo.

Japanese firms were also unenthusiastic: Only 4% of large and mid-sized firms planned to used bitcoin, showed a Reuters poll last month.

The value of bitcoin is highly volatile. It hit a record high of $2,980 last month.

Like other virtual currencies, such as Ethereum and Ripple, bitcoin has no central authority and relies instead on thousands of computers across the world that validate transactions and add new units to the system — technology known as blockchain.

Bitcoin can be traded on exchanges in the same manner as stocks and bonds. It has also become a mode of payment for some retailers, and a way to transfer funds without the need for a third party.

Reuters

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