Japan levels embezzlement charges against Bitcoin exchange CEO
Mark Karpeles, CEO of the disgraced Japanese Bitcoin exchange MtGox, has been charged by the Japanese authorities for embezzlement, according to Yahoo News. Karpeles was taken by the Japanese police last month on the charges of embezzlement of hundreds of millions of dollars in Bitcoin. The allegations against France-born Karpeles include the charge that he is the beneficiary of this fraud and had falsified data. Although the CEO of the former Bitcoin exchange has been held by the Japanese authorities for six weeks, yet no formal charges had been levied on him. As per Yahoo News, he was....
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Police arrested Mt Gox CEO Mark Karpeles today in Japan on allegations that he manipulated volume on the then-market leading bitcoin exchange platform prior to its 2014 collapse. The formal action from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police follows escalating reports this week that Karpeles was facing criminal charges for fraud and embezzlement, and comes more than a year after Mt Gox first filed for bankruptcy protection in the US and Japan. A report by The Wall Street Journal indicated Karpeles denied he was facing imminent arrest as early as Friday, calling accusations "false" and suggesting....
Previously, the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office indicted Mark Karpeles with embezzlement. This week, The Guardian disclosed that the former Mt. Gox CEO has been alleged by the Japanese Prosecutors for the embezzlement of US$2.62 million worth of bitcoin. Karpeles however, denied the charges and claimed that he "had intended to pay back the money," reported the Yomiuri Shimbun. Bitcoin Cannot be owned. On August 6, the Tokyo District Court ruled that the bitcoins lost during the collapse of Mt. Gox cannot be reimbursed, because virtual currency cannot be subjected to ownership.....
Former Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpeles has been under investigation by Japanese authorities since February of 2014 and is soon expected to face charges of fraud at Mt. Gox. A new report in Japan has been released and can be seen in its entirely (in Japanese) here. A general, but not exact translation is available here. Mt. Gox (Magic: The Gathering Online Exchange) collapsed in spectacular fashion in February of 2014 after several months of internal mismanagement, all under the stewardship of Mark Karpeles. Ever since that time, the Metropolitan Police Department in Japan has been working on....
Japanese prosecutors charged long embattled Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpeles with embezzlement over the loss of hundreds of millions of dollars worth in bitcoins, according to Jiji Press News agency. The charges mark the most recent chapter in the former CEO's fall from grace. Under Japanese law, a person can be held without formal charges for three weeks. The 30-year-old Karpeles was taken into police custody in Tokyo last month over his involvement in the disappearance of Mt. Gox funds. Authorities later re-arrested him for stealing 321 million yen (HK$20 million) worth of bitcoin from....
This story has been updated with comment from the Federal Services Agency. Japanese government officials are weighing whether to regulate bitcoin exchanges in the wake of new developments in the ongoing investigation of Mt Gox. Media reports from The Japan Times and The Japan News suggest that the government, including those from the country's Financial Services Agency, may seek to implement a registration system for exchange operators. Such a framework may include a licensing scheme and user identification requirements. The Times quoted Finance Minister Taro Aso who said that government....