Cardano’s Charles Hoskinson clarifies disputed 1,096 BTC payment from project’s early days

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A payment of 1,096 BTC doesn’t raise many eyebrows when it’s worth $454,000. It raises considerably more when that same stash of Bitcoin would be worth roughly $70 million today.

Cardano founder Charles Hoskinson has publicly addressed questions about the allocation of 1,096 BTC from the project’s early funding structure, confirming the funds were used to pay for a 2016 audit of Cardano’s crowdsale and to compensate three reviewers who conducted it. The clarification came in response to pointed demands for receipts from Thomas Braziel, a bankruptcy claims investor who has been pressing for transparency around the custody and control of early Cardano funds.

The backstory on Cardano’s crowdsale and the disputed BTC

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 were allocated to the Swiss Cardano Foundation. But a smaller portion, roughly 1,090 to 1,096 BTC, was allocated to an Isle of Man foundation entity that played a role in the project’s early legal and operational framework.

That Isle of Man entity was dissolved in December 2025. Braziel seized on that gap, questioning Hoskinson’s role in the Isle of Man entity and demanding a full accounting of where the Bitcoin went and who currently controls it.

Hoskinson’s response, posted on June 14, was direct. The 1,096 BTC paid for the crowdsale audit and the people who performed it. At 2016 valuations, that came out to around $454,000, a not-unreasonable figure for a multi-round audit covering a complex international fundraise that involved legal frameworks spanning multiple jurisdictions.

Governance tensions are the real fuel here

The Cardano ecosystem has been grappling with reviews of over 11,000 DAOs and ongoing debates about ADA treasury management. Legal entities were established across jurisdictions, from the Isle of Man to Switzerland, each serving different roles in the project’s governance and fund management.

What this means for Cardano investors

The 1,096 BTC in question represents roughly 1% of the total crowdsale raise. The tension comes from the fact that Bitcoin’s price has made every historical allocation look enormous in retrospect, and the dissolution of the Isle of Man entity removed one layer of institutional accountability that investors might have relied on.

One thing worth watching is whether Braziel escalates his demands beyond social media commentary. As a bankruptcy claims investor, he operates in a space where legal mechanisms exist to compel disclosure. If this moves from a public spat to a formal legal or regulatory process, the implications for Cardano’s governance structure, and for the dissolved Isle of Man entity’s remaining obligations, could become significantly more complex.

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