You know, the Gerald Cotten saga still hits different when you really dig into it. This whole Quadriga collapse thing became basically crypto's biggest unsolved mystery, and honestly, the more you look into the details, the crazier it gets.



So for context—CoinDesk has been covering this extensively, and they've actually won major journalism awards for their investigative work on major exchange collapses (they got recognized for their FTX reporting). Their journalists follow pretty strict editorial guidelines, which matters when you're dealing with a story this complex.

The Gerald Cotten case is wild because it touches on so many questions that the community still debates. Was it really what it seemed? How much did people actually know? And what does it say about exchange security and custody back then?

What's interesting is how this story keeps resurfacing. Gerald Cotten's death in India, the locked wallets, the missing funds—it's the kind of case that made a lot of people rethink how they approach exchange security. Some people think there's more to the story, others think it was exactly what the official narrative said.

If you're getting into crypto history or just want to understand how we got to where we are now with regulation and exchange standards, the Quadriga situation is basically required reading. It's one of those moments that fundamentally shifted how the industry thinks about risk management.
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