Behind the remarkable growth of the public blockchain Solana, one of its co-founders, Stephen Akridge, has once again become the focus of the market due to a divorce property dispute. (Background: The 2024 Crypto Narrative Ranking: Meme Coins Reign Supreme, AI, RWA, and the Rise of the Solana Ecosystem) (Background Supplement: aiPool) The first AI autonomous presale token "$METAV" launched with a market cap of $100 million; will it become the next GOAT?) This year, the public blockchain Solana has performed excellently in terms of ecosystem, price, and total locked value, with prices rising more than 80% since the beginning of the year, reaching a total market cap of $94 billion, thus becoming a key focus of the community. However, this time, it has attracted attention in the crypto market once again due to its co-founder Stephen Akridge being embroiled in allegations from his ex-wife Elisa Rossi. Ex-wife angrily accuses Akridge: Misappropriation of millions of dollars in staking rewards. The story of this couple dates back to March 8, 2013, when Stephen Akridge was working at the semiconductor company Qualcomm Inc. and married the plaintiff Elisa Rossi. About five years later, Akridge’s colleague Anatoly Yakovenko recruited him and four others to found a company that eventually became Solana Labs. They remained together until their official separation in February 2023. During this period, Akridge became a key figure globally with Solana's success. However, Akridge left Solana Labs in January 2024 to start a startup called Anza and became the CEO of a cybersecurity company called Cyber Grant. Despite their separation, the couple's story is not over. Rossi recently filed a lawsuit, accusing Akridge of misconduct during the property distribution process and of allegedly stealing Rossi’s cryptocurrency staking rewards, with Akridge using his expertise to illegally claim millions of dollars in staking rewards for himself. Lawsuit documents revealed that the Solana co-founder was accused of not adhering to the divorce agreement. Reports from (Law.com) indicated that as part of the divorce agreement, Elisa Rossi received a significant amount of digital assets from Akridge’s three cryptocurrency wallets. However, Rossi claimed that between March and May, Akridge retained control over some of her crypto assets and transferred her SOL assets to his account during this time to claim the staking rewards for himself. Rossi disclosed that she only discovered this issue two months after the divorce. Subsequently, she attempted to communicate with Akridge more than ten times to reclaim the assets, but not only did she fail to gain cooperation, she was also mocked by him. According to the lawsuit documents, Akridge responded to her: 'Good luck getting those staking rewards back.' According to the lawsuit documents, Rossi seemed unaware of how Solana staking worked. The original text reads: After March 6, 2024, Ms. Rossi did not receive any staking rewards. Ms. Rossi began asking others where she could check the staking rewards earned by her SOL tokens. Eventually, Ms. Rossi asked Mr. Akridge where she could find the rewards earned by her SOL tokens, and Mr. Akridge became nervous and refused to answer. In the end, Ms. Rossi contacted the person responsible for managing the Solana validator database, who informed her that Mr. Akridge was stealing her staking rewards. This person showed Ms. Rossi how to withdraw her SOL tokens from Mr. Akridge’s staking account so that she could transfer them to another validator and start earning staking rewards for herself. This couple, who witnessed Solana's success for ten years, ultimately faced divorce due to a breakdown of trust and are now on the brink of court over the staking reward dispute, which is quite lamentable.