Part of the CustodyStress archive of observed Bitcoin custody incidents
CS-00351
Forced relocation — exchange custody (2016)
ConstrainedCase description
Nigerian authorities imposed foreign exchange restrictions in June 2016 that prevented Nigerian bank accounts from making international wire transfers. Nigerians who held BTC on international exchanges found they could not fund new accounts or receive fiat withdrawals through their Nigerian banks. BTC remained accessible but converting to naira required premium-priced P2P arrangements.
Custody context
| Stress condition | Forced relocation |
| Custody system | Exchange custody |
| Outcome | Constrained |
| Documentation | Unknown |
| Year observed | 2016 |
| Country | Nigeria |
Structural dependencies observed
What this illustrates
Before anyone could access the funds, a legal process had to be completed first. Whether full access was ultimately possible is unclear, but significant delay or outside intervention was involved.
Outcome interpretation
Access remained possible, but only with delay, dependence, or significant difficulty.
Source
Publicly Reported
Evidence type
News article
Evidence link
Related cases involving forced relocation
This archive documents observed custody survivability failures. It does not attempt to document all Bitcoin losses or security incidents.
Submit a case
← All cases
Framework references
Where Bitcoin Custody Intersects Legal and Fiduciary Authority
Where custody creates gaps in estate planning, fiduciary duty, and professional responsibility.
Professional Scope Boundary Matrix
What each professional or product covers, what they do not, and where gaps form between them.
The Independent Assessment Layer in Bitcoin Custody
How independent diagnostic layers emerge when multiple parties depend on shared infrastructure.
Translate