Detailed Timeline of the 1Feex.. address 2011: Acquisition …
Detailed Timeline of the 1Feex.. address
2011: Acquisition and Initial Movements
February 2011: The OTC Agreement
Dr. Wright’s Testimony: Through his company Tulip Trading Limited (TTL), he negotiates the purchase of 79,956 BTC with the Russian exchange WMIRK.
February 27, 2011: The Purchase Order is generated. Wright agrees to pay $21.01 USD per BTC via Liberty Reserve.
Market Context: At this time, the price on Mt. Gox is approximately $0.90 USD. Wright explains this 2,000% premium as a "liquidity and privacy fee."
March 1, 2011: Fund Settlement
Event: The 79,956 BTC are moved into the address 1FeexV6bAHb8ybZjqQMjJrcCrHGW9sb6uF.
Dr. Wright’s Testimony: This transaction was the settlement of his February purchase.
June 19, 2011: The First Public Mt. Gox Hack
Event: An auditor’s account is compromised, and the price on Mt. Gox crashes from $17.50 to $0.01 USD.
Market Fact: This is the event most historians cite as the "first hack," though the 1Feex movement happened three months prior.
2012–2014: Custody and the Mt. Gox Collapse
October 23, 2012: Physical Evidence
Dr. Wright’s Testimony: He takes a photograph of the paper wallet containing the 1Feex private key hidden.
Context: The photo is included in a Deed of Trust with Calvin Ayre to prove his net worth and back his business ventures.
February 28, 2014: Mt. Gox Bankruptcy
Event: Mt. Gox shuts down, admitting the loss of 850,000 BTC.
Market Price: Trading stops at around $100 USD on Mt. Gox, while other exchanges like Bitstamp hold at $550 USD.
2020: The Critical Loss
February 5, 2020: The Home Network Hack
Dr. Wright’s Testimony: He reports a hack of his home Wi-Fi. Attackers allegedly delete the encrypted files (Shamir's Secret Sharing) needed to access the 1Feex address.
The Destruction: In a state of frustration, Wright testifies to physically destroying the paper wallet (the one photographed in 2012), losing all technical access to the funds.
2021–2024: Legal Battles and the COPA Trial
2021: Tulip Trading Ltd vs. Developers
Action: Wright sues Bitcoin developers, claiming they have a fiduciary duty to write a code patch to return the 1Feex funds to him without the private keys.
March 14, 2024: The Mellor Ruling (COPA Case)
Event: Judge James Mellor rules that Dr. Wright is not Satoshi Nakamoto.
Evidence Review: The court finds that the 2011 Purchase Order and other documents related to the 1Feex address were forged using software and fonts that did not exist in 2011.
August 2025, a "Salomon Brothers" website issued a legal notice claiming the 1Feex Bitcoin address (79,956 BTC) was abandoned, demanding owner verification by October 2025.
February 2026: The Karpelès Hard Fork Proposal
Event: Mark Karpelès proposes a Bitcoin Hard Fork to recover the 1Feex funds for Mt. Gox creditors.
Dr. Wright’s Stance: He maintains under oath that the funds are his and any such fork would be a violation of his legal property rights. ..
Replies
@Sunnie @Gavin Let us know your comments.!
Seams like this testimony is referenced
Yes, everything stems from the testimonies attached to various lawsuits, nowadays we have to use AI to sift through tons of documents to find what we are looking for.