The $70M question hanging over Cardano's earliest days
Hoskinson's explanation: a routine 2016 bill, not a $70M mystery
Cardano co-founder Charles Hoskinson (@IOHK_Charles) has given his most detailed account yet of 1,096 $BTC linked to the project's dissolved Isle of Man Foundation. Speaking during a weekend AMA focused on governance and treasury management, Hoskinson framed the allocation as payment for a legitimate audit of the original ADA token crowdsale.
Cardano's genesis crowdsale ran from October 2015 through January 2017 and raised approximately 108,844.5 BTC in total. The majority of those funds went to the Swiss Cardano Foundation, while a smaller portion of roughly 1,090 to 1,096 BTC was allocated to an Isle of Man entity that played a role in the project's early legal and operational framework.
According to Hoskinson's livestream, the transaction stems from a March 2016 request by the Cardano Foundation's early chairman, Michael Parsons. The allocation was meant to cover a comprehensive audit of the original ADA crowdsale, which primarily raised funds from Japanese investors. With Bitcoin closing around $414 on March 13, 2016, the 1,096 BTC translated to approximately $454,000. Hoskinson says the bill was split among three named reviewers: Parsons, John Maguire, and Bruce Milligan.
His core argument is straightforward: the payment looked unremarkable in 2016. That same 1,096 BTC is worth roughly $70 million today because Bitcoin's price has appreciated sharply over the intervening decade, transforming what may have been a routine operating expense into one of crypto's most scrutinised foundation-era transactions.
Braziel wants receipts, not just a founder's word
The Isle of Man entity was dissolved in December 2025, a detail that has fuelled questions about record-keeping and oversight. Corporate filings reviewed by Braziel show Hoskinson was designated as enforcer of the foundation, a role overseeing compliance of its council with its governing rules. Braziel's core questions centre on where the BTC went, who received it, and who currently controls the keys, rather than any specific claim about Hoskinson's personal direction of the funds. Community members have pointed out that records may sit with the Cardano Foundation rather than with Hoskinson directly, and Hoskinson's own position is that the Isle of Man entity was Foundation-run under Parsons.
Braziel, founder of 117 Partners and known online as @Bkclaims, has retained a crypto forensics firm to investigate the history of Cardano's founding, its original ICO proceeds, the movement of the BTC raised, and the financial history of the founding entities. His demands are concrete: official invoices and service agreements from the named reviewers, board-level approvals authorising the payment, and on-chain or ledger evidence showing which wallets received the 1,096 BTC and when.
Braziel has also questioned whether the scale of the Bitcoin allocation aligns with typical corporate audit expenses of that era, though he has repeatedly clarified that he is not alleging theft or fraud, framing his inquiry strictly as a matter of historical transparency and ecosystem record-keeping.
The open question is whether documentary evidence can substantiate the account Hoskinson has given, or whether the absence of invoices and payment records leaves the dispute permanently open as a governance overhang on $ADA.
Sources: CryptoNews: Charles Hoskinson Stands On $70M BTC Payment From 2016 Manx Entity Bitcoin.com News: Cardano's Hoskinson Says Disputed 1,096 Bitcoin Funded a 2016 Audit Yahoo Finance: Investor Hires Crypto Forensics Firm to Probe Cardano's Early Finances
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