Craig Wright has just 23 days left to prove his claim he’s really Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of Bitcoin and founder of the cryptocurrency revolution. “Given the Defendant’s many inconsistencies and misstatements, the Court questions whether it is remotely plausible that the mysterious ‘bonded courier’ is going to arrive, yet alone that he will arrive in January 2020 as the Defendant now contends,” Judge Beth Bloom wrote.
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EXCLUSIVE: Would-be Satoshi Craig Wright produces Tulip Trust III
The judge in the $8.7 billion lawsuit by the estate of Wright’s late partner sealed yet another document that Wright says proves he has the 1.1 million bitcoins mined by Satoshi Nakamoto
With the time to file documents in the trial running out, Craig Wright quietly revealed a third in the series of trusts he said contain Satoshi Nakamoto's 1.1 million bitcoins. Tulip Trust III was sealed at the request of Ira Kleiman' lawyers. The brother of Wright's late partner is suing him for half of the Satoshi bitcoins.
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Craig Wright begins playing offense in $7.2 billion bitcoin case
Craig Wright wants to know how Ira Kleiman paid $400,000 cash for a home shortly after he got his late bitcoin billionaire brother’s hard drives
Craig Wright began playing offense in a 500,000 bitcoin lawsuit. After he told Ira Kleiman that his dead brother’s hard drives might hold a small fortune in bitcoin, Kleiman bought a house for nearly $400,000 in cash. Now Wright wants to know if his legal opponent is hiding something.
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EXCLUSIVE: Craig Wright shares timestamped document he claims reveals roots of “Satoshi Nakamoto” name
The self-proclaimed Bitcoin creator said the pseudonym was inspired by ‘the Japanese Adam Smith.’
One of the greatest mysteries in crypto that no one has ever been able to solve is the identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the author of the Bitcoin whitepaper. To defend his widely scorned claim, Craig Wright showed us a document he said explains the name's origins.



