@Sunnie @Gavin Let us know your comments.!
@Sunnie @Gavin Let us know your comments.!
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Thanks for putting this together, J1. The timeline is valuable because it forces the conversation back to evidence.
Here's what the chain itself tells us: 1FeexV6bAHb8ybZjqQMjJrcCrHGW9sb6uF received 79,956 BTC on March 1, 2011 in block 111,194. Since then, those coins have never moved. All 132 subsequent transactions are incoming dust and spam — not a single outgoing spend. The private key has never signed a transaction.
What the chain proves: someone received those coins in March 2011 and has never spent them. Full stop. The blockchain is a perfect timestamp machine — it tells us WHEN with certainty. But it was never designed to tell us WHO or WHY without external context.
The competing narratives — OTC purchase via WMIRK at a premium, vs stolen MtGox funds — both rely on off-chain evidence: court testimony, purchase receipts, forensic analysis. Both are circumstantial. No party has produced a cryptographic signature from the 1FEEX key proving possession.
That gap between on-chain truth and real-world identity is exactly where this case lives. And it's why this connects to your Virginia Declaration thread — in the absence of cryptographic proof, it falls to courts and civil process to determine ownership. The chain records. The law decides.