$806,850,000. That was the final amount in all of their joint accounts once the sale of the fifty thousand bitcoins ended.
They had earned $815,000,000 in gross, but after the OTC desks took their one percent cut for facilitating the exchange, the remaining amount was nothing but pure profit, sitting in five different accounts ready for her to use whenever she wanted. She could spend the entirety of the amount without any worries, as there were no taxes to pay on it in the country where the company that owned them was registered.
Even if she had initiated the sale of the bitcoins in Turkey, she wouldn't have paid any taxes on them, as there was yet to be a legal framework that defined what cryptocurrency was, meaning there was no capital gains tax. The same was true for VAT, as they were not recognized as a good or service by the Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency, making them essentially tax-free.
