Craig Wright could not give the name of the person to whom he sent bitcoins on behalf of Satoshi Nakamoto
On February 13, a regular meeting was held on the COPA lawsuit against Craig Wright. The programmer could not give the name of the person to whom he sent bitcoins on behalf of Satoshi Nakamoto.
On February 13, 2024, a regular meeting was held on the claim of the Crypto Open Patent Alliance against programmer Craig Wright. During the process, the man could not give the name of the person to whom he was sending bitcoins on behalf of Satoshi Nakamoto.
Wright claimed that he sent bitcoins to hundreds of people through many of his companies, whose addresses were "considered to belong to Satoshi Nakamoto," the report said.
When the programmer was asked about the coins that Satoshi allegedly gave to "hundreds" of other people, he said that he did not remember them all now. Wright was also asked to give at least one name, but he could not.
In addition, the programmer criticized experts who "cannot verify their work" during the trial.
A man under the pseudonym bitnorbert, who attended the court hearing, wrote in his X (formerly Twitter):
"In general, it was another day when a cornered man was helplessly falling apart in court, and his lawyer was forced to sit silently and watch. The judge had to interrupt Wright several times to get an answer from him."
