Craig Wright wrapped up his testimony in a trial questioning if he is Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator on a defiant note Wednesday, declaring that for him, the trial was about “justice.”
The trial, brought in the U.K. by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA), is well into its second week. Wright has testified for the last several days, answering questions about his connections to the world’s first cryptocurrency. He was cross-examined by COPA’s lawyers as well as counsel for the other plaintiff, a group of Bitcoin developers, who asked questions on cryptographic keys, his expectations for compensation, his validation claims and his self-proclaimed decision to lock bitcoin funds and information in a trust.
Both COPA’s counsel and the developers Wright faces asserted that Wright was either “wrong” or that his testimony was all “lies” at various times in the trial.
Wright’s witnesses will begin taking the stand on Thursday, starting with Ignatius Pang, who has known Wright since 2007 and can recount a conversation around 2008 where Wright mentioned blockchain, according to court documents. Robert Jenkins will also be called forward. He met Wright around 1998 or 1999, when Wright worked for Vodafone in Australia and has said he discussed concepts of electronic ledgers with Jenkins.
Lastly, Shoaib Yousef will also take the stand for Wright on Thursday. Yousef has known Wright since 2006 and has said he spoke to Wright about digital currency as a concept in the late 2000s.
Jesse Hamilton and Sandali Handagama contributed to reporting.
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