Cardano’s Hoskinson Says Disputed 1,096 Bitcoin Funded a 2016 Audit Amid $70 Million Mystery
Cardano co-founder Charles Hoskinson has said that 1,096 BTC, worth roughly $70 million today, held by an Isle of Man foundation was used to cover audit costs from the project’s 2016 crowdsale.

Key Takeaways
- Hoskinson said 1,096 BTC, now worth about $70 million, paid for Cardano’s 2016 crowdsale audit.
- Investor Thomas Braziel is demanding receipts; the Isle of Man entity that held the funds dissolved in December 2025.
- The dispute escalated as ADA fell more than 25% in a week, intensifying scrutiny of the founder.
Founder Addresses a Long-Running Mystery
Charles Hoskinson, the co-founder of Cardano and chief executive of Input Output, has clarified the fate of 1,096 BTC tied to the project’s earliest days. The funds, held by an Isle of Man foundation entity, were used to pay for a 2016 audit of Cardano’s crowdsale and to compensate the reviewers who conducted it, Hoskinson said, per crypto bankruptcy claims investor Thomas Braziel.
The disclosure followed pointed demands from Braziel, who has been pressing for invoices, approvals and payment records related to the custody and control of early Cardano funds. The stash is worth about $70 million at current bitcoin prices, though at 2016 valuations, the audit-related figure cited came to roughly $454,000.

“1,096 BTC was used for audit costs in 2016/2017,” Hoskinson stated, emphasizing that the expenditure was a legitimate cost of vetting a complex international fundraise.
Inside Cardano’s Genesis 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 were allocated to the Swiss Cardano Foundation, while a smaller portion (roughly 1,090 to 1,096 BTC) went to the Isle of Man entity that played a role in the project’s early legal and operational framework.
That Isle of Man entity was dissolved in December 2025, a detail that has fueled questions about record-keeping and oversight. Braziel, who specializes in distressed crypto bankruptcy claims, has argued that a multimillion-dollar treasury demands a documented paper trail.
For context, a multi-round audit covering an international fundraise spanning several jurisdictions could plausibly justify the roughly $454,000 spent at 2016 prices. The dispute centers less on whether the sum was reasonable than on whether it can be fully substantiated with receipts.
Pressure Mounts as ADA Slides
The scrutiny has landed during a difficult stretch for Cardano. The controversy unfolded as ADA, the network’s native token, posted monthly losses nearing 30%, sharpening attention on the founder’s stewardship of early funds. Hoskinson is no stranger to public disputes and Bitcoin.com News has previously reported on his laments about the gap between Cardano’s perception and its fundamentals.

Hoskinson has positioned the clarification as a good-faith attempt to put the matter to rest, but whether it satisfies Braziel and other critics may depend on the documentation that follows the explanation. Looking ahead, it remains to be seen whether Hoskinson and Input Output produce the kind of paper trail that could either close the 1,096 BTC mystery or keep it open for the foreseeable future.
