Matthew Moody: Early Bitcoin Miner Dies in Plane Crash, Estate Inaccessible
BlockedBitcoin held by a deceased owner — no recovery path was available for heirs or the estate.
Matthew Philip Moody, 26, of San Ramon, California, was an early Bitcoin miner who accumulated coins during the network's early years using his home computer. On August 13, 2013, Moody died in a plane crash near Chico during an observational flight. His father, Michael Moody, a retired software engineer, was aware that his son had mined Bitcoin but possessed no information about the wallet addresses, coin count, or access credentials. Investigation revealed that Matthew had used blockchain.
info, a third-party web wallet service, to store his holdings. Without the specific username, password, or recovery phrases, access to the wallet was impossible. Critically, blockchain.info could not and would not grant access to the account based on proof of ownership or legal authority alone—a limitation inherent to custodial web wallets that do not recognize legal inheritance mechanisms.
Michael spent years attempting to reconstruct information about his son's holdings through fragmentary records. At the time of Matthew's death, Bitcoin was trading below $100 per coin. The case remained unresolved, with the total amount of BTC held never confirmed. Bloomberg reported the case in 2018 as a prominent illustration of how Bitcoin's decentralized design creates an inheritance dead end when no access documentation or recovery procedure exists.
The incident highlighted the tension between traditional estate law and the technical reality of cryptographic custody: legal authority to inherit assets does not automatically confer the ability to access them.
| Stress condition | Owner death |
| Custody system | Exchange custody |
| Outcome | Blocked |
| Documentation | Present and interpretable |
| Year observed | 2013 |
| Country | United States |
The gap between legal ownership and operational access
Bitcoin custody was designed for use by its owner. The security model assumes that the person who set up the wallet is the same person who will use it. It does not assume that someone who has never interacted with the wallet will need to operate it months or years later, with no guidance and no one to ask.
The knowledge that dies with the owner includes more than credentials: it includes the understanding of why the setup was built a certain way, which addresses held the Bitcoin, whether a passphrase was set, where the backup was stored and why, and what the heir should do first. Without this knowledge, heirs typically face a search process before they face an access process.
Cases where heirs succeeded consistently share one feature: the owner had communicated the existence of the Bitcoin and left enough information for someone else to find and use the credentials. In most cases, this was informal — a note, a conversation, a letter in the files. Formal estate planning documents rarely contained the operational details needed for actual access.
The failure that causes heirs to lose Bitcoin is almost never the custody setup itself — it is the assumption that the setup is self-explanatory to someone who has never used it. Communicating the existence of the Bitcoin, its approximate location, and who knows how to access it adds almost no security risk while dramatically changing the inheritance outcome.
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