Note that other sources are suggesting that there is evidence that the cold wallets at issue never existed, the firms was shuffling coins from new investors to pay withdrawals before the supposed loss, that Quadriga previously claimed to use multisig wallets, and that the whole death-and-lost-keys story may be fake.<p><a href="https://cryptonews.com/news/the-quadrigacx-case-just-got-a-whole-lot-more-complicated-3309.htm" rel="nofollow">https://cryptonews.com/news/the-quadrigacx-case-just-got-a-w...</a>
I would bet $50 that the guy is not dead. It can't be <i>that</i> expensive or difficult to get a fake death certificate in India. Either the cold wallet never existed in the first place, in which case their company was an elaborate ponzi scheme, or he's absconded with the contents of it.
A very expensive reminder that the "bus factor" is a real threat. Most startups I've worked at had (at least at one point) only a single person with passwords to things like the AWS root account, and other similarly important things. What happens if that person disappears? Scary stuff for anybody on the hook for business continuity.