Tokyo Court Rejects Mt. Gox For Bankruptcy Protection

Mark Karpeles, CEO of Mt. Gox, Japan-based world's largest bitcoin exchange, bows for an apology during a news conference at the Tokyo District Court in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo on Feb. 28, 2014, after filing for bankru... Mark Karpeles, CEO of Mt. Gox, Japan-based world's largest bitcoin exchange, bows for an apology during a news conference at the Tokyo District Court in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo on Feb. 28, 2014, after filing for bankruptcy court protection. Karpeles admitted that investors's coins have gone due to hacking into its compnay weak computer system. ( The Yomiuri Shimbun via AP Images ) MORE LESS
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TOKYO (AP) — The Mt. Gox bitcoin exchange in Tokyo is headed for liquidation after a court rejected its bankruptcy protection application.

Mt. Gox said Wednesday the Tokyo District Court decided the company, which was a trading platform and storehouse for the bitcoin virtual currency, would not be able to resurrect itself under a business rehabilitation process filed for in February.

An administrator will try to sell the company’s assets and many creditors, including those who had bitcoins with the exchange, are unlikely to get any money back.

After Mt Gox. went offline in February, its CEO Mark Karpeles said that 850,000 bitcoins worth several hundred millions dollars were unaccounted for, blaming a weakness in the exchange’s systems.

Later, Mt. Gox found 200,000 of the bitcoins, changing the estimate for the lost virtual currency to 650,000 bitcoins, although the exact amount is still under investigation. Mt Gox. has suggested the bitcoins were stolen. The company has not been able to confirm the bitcoin balances of its users.

Bitcoins were created in 2009 by a mysterious figure or group known as Satoshi Nakamoto and are used for transactions across borders without third parties such as banks. They have also become an investment craze.

Mt Gox. said in a statement that bankruptcy proceedings are likely to start in the U.S. along with the action in Japan, but the timing is still unclear.

It said there may be a buyer for its business but that was still undecided.

The Mt. Gox mess has been a setback to the currency’s image because its boosters have promoted bitcoin’s cryptography as protecting it from counterfeiting and theft. But bitcoin proponents have insisted that Mt. Gox is an isolated case.

Japanese legal experts say that it would be difficult to prosecute Mt. Gox because its business falls outside the boundaries of existing regulations.

Federal law enforcement agencies are scrutinizing whether bitcoins are used increasingly in criminal activity such as the now-defunct Silk Road illegal drug marketplace.

Newsweek claimed it had found the creator of bitcoins, but Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, a California resident, denied in an interview with The Associated Press that he has ever had anything to do with the digital currency.

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Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at twitter.com/yurikageyama

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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