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Intro | Widow of Quadriga CX founder Gerry Cotten | ||
A.K.A. | Jennifer K. M. Robertson | ||
A.K.A. | Jennifer K. M. Robertson | ||
Places | Canada | ||
is | Founder | ||
Work field | Business | ||
Gender |
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Birth | 1988, Halifax, Halifax County, Nova Scotia, Canada | ||
Age | 37 years | ||
Residence | Fall River, Halifax, Halifax County, Canada | ||
Family |
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Biography
Jennifer Kathleen Margaret Robertson (born 1988 as Jennifer Griffith) is a Canadian real estate developer best known as the heir and widow of the CEO of the controversial QuadrigaCX cryptocurrency exchange.
Robertson and Gerald Cotten were in a relationship for several years, prior to their June 2018 marriage. In December, 2018, Robertson and Cotten were on a trip to India to sponsor an orphanage when he suffered severe intestinal distress related to his chronic Crohn's disease. Although he was given hospital care, his condition worsened, and allegedly, he died less than a day after admission.
The India Times reported that limited funds had been made available to build the Jennifer Robertson and Gerald Cotten House; the couple had yet to release funds for the orphanage's operation.
After Cotten's death Robertson inherited millions of dollars in real estate holding.
Approximately a month after Cotten's death Robertson informed shareholders that, although she had consulted computer security experts that the funds her husband had been managing were in "cold storage", and his files did not contain encryption keys required to manage them.
In April 2019, Robertson voluntarily agreed not to sell or transfer any of her assets.
On October 8, 2019, Robertson returned $12 million CAD to Quadriga, from her husband's estate. Bloomberg News described this as a voluntary settlement. It listed the assets she was keeping, which included her wedding band, her personal vehicle, her personal retirement savings fund,
Robertson said she was not involved in how her husband managed Quadriga, and had initially assumed her inheritance came from “legitimately earned profits, salary and dividends.”