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Karpeles Recalls Mt. Gox Bonuses as 1,000 BTC Coins Move

Sun, 15/02/2026 - 19:11
On-chain data confirms that two 1,000 BTC Casascius coins were activated on Sunday after sitting dormant for more than 13 years.
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Karpeles Recalls Mt. Gox Bonuses as 1,000 BTC Coins Move
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The movement of two legendary "physical Bitcoins" holding a combined value of over $120 million has attracted some attention on social media. 

Former Mt. Gox CEO Mark Karpelès has revealed that he once handed out similar, albeit smaller, fortune-holding coins as casual employee bonuses.

Casascius coins, explained 

On Sunday, on-chain sleuths flagged a massive transaction: two 1,000 BTC Casascius coins had moved on the blockchain after sitting dormant for more than 13 years.

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These funds originated from "physical bitcoins." These are tangible gold-plated bars or coins created in the early days of crypto that contain a private key hidden underneath a holographic sticker.

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To spend the funds, the owner must physically peel off the tamper-evident hologram to reveal the key. 

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Created by Mike Caldwell between 2011 and 2013, Casascius coins were an attempt to make Bitcoin tangible for face-to-face trading. They are solid brass, gold-plated, or silver rounds and bars.

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Each coin features a "private key" on a card embedded inside the coin, covered by a tamper-resistant hologram.

Caldwell stopped minting them in November 2013 after FinCEN notified him that selling pre-funded coins qualified as money transmission.

The employee perk 

Karpelès confirmed that while he didn't hold the massive 1,000 BTC "gold bars." He possessed a significant number of the smaller denominations during Mt. Gox's peak.

"I had a bunch of 25 BTC and 1 BTC, yea. Gave these to employees as bonus," Karpelès wrote.

When Casascius coins were minted (2011–2013), a 25 BTC coin would have been worth anywhere from $100 to $25,000.

Today, a single 25 BTC coin is worth approximately $1.5 million, not counting the massive numismatic premium collectors pay for an unpeeled, pristine physical coin.

It remains unknown how many former Mt. Gox staff members kept their physical coins unpeeled. 

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