Matthew Moody: Bitcoin Miner Dies in Plane Crash, Wallet Inaccessible
BlockedNo documentation described the custody setup — recovery without the owner's knowledge was not possible.
Matthew Moody was an early Bitcoin miner who began accumulating coins during the network's nascent period when mining remained feasible on standard consumer hardware. He operated a software wallet on a personal device but maintained no written record of passphrases, wallet files, or recovery procedures. There was no documented backup method, no communication to family members about the existence or location of his holdings, and no designated recovery contact.
In August 2013, Moody died in a plane crash. His father Michael subsequently learned that Bitcoin existed and that his son had accumulated a meaningful quantity of it, but the knowledge to access it had died with Matthew. The exact amount was never disclosed publicly. The wallet remained on-chain, its contents verifiable and theoretically recoverable, but cryptographically inaccessible without the passphrase or original wallet file—both of which existed only in Matthew's memory or on his personal device without backup.
Michael Moody was unable to mount a technical recovery. He had no copy of the wallet file, no record of the passphrase, and no means to brute-force or recover credentials. The Bitcoin was not lost from the network; it was lost from the family. This case became a canonical example of knowledge concentration failure: one person held all operational and recovery knowledge, died without transferring it, and the asset became permanently inaccessible to heirs despite being known to exist.
Michael Moody subsequently became a public advocate for Bitcoin inheritance planning, speaking to Bloomberg in 2018 about the emotional and practical weight of knowing his son's Bitcoin existed on-chain but having no path to reach it. His advocacy helped frame early best practices for digital asset documentation and succession planning.
| Stress condition | Documentation absent |
| Custody system | Software wallet |
| Outcome | Blocked |
| Documentation | Present and interpretable |
| Year observed | 2013 |
| Country | United States |
What the absence of documentation actually removes
What documentation provides is a starting point. Without it, heirs face three unknowns before they face any access problem: does the Bitcoin exist, where is it held, and what is needed to access it. Most of this information cannot be reconstructed after the owner dies or becomes incapacitated. Educated guesses, blockchain searches, and device inventories occasionally locate wallets — but without credentials, finding the wallet does not help.
Cases in this archive where documentation was absent but recovery succeeded typically involved one of two factors: an exchange account where the heir knew the email address and could navigate the account recovery process, or a designated person who had been given credentials informally and could act. Self-custody without any documentation or designated knowledge-holder is consistently the worst combination.
The content of documentation matters as much as its existence. A note that says "my Bitcoin is in a hardware wallet in the safe" is better than nothing but insufficient. Effective documentation specifies: what type of wallet, where the seed phrase is stored, whether a passphrase exists and where it is documented, and any exchange accounts and the email addresses used. It should be tested — the executor should be able to confirm the information is accurate before it is needed.
Documentation does not need to expose credentials to be useful. A document that describes the custody structure, points to where credentials are stored, and names a person who has been briefed can be stored without security risk. The goal is not to put the seed phrase in a filing cabinet — it is to ensure the executor has a map, not a blank wall.
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