New York lawsuit asks court to declare ownership of 39,069 dormant Bitcoin addresses
The Facts
- A New York lawsuit filed on May 1 seeks a court declaration of ownership over 39,069 dormant Bitcoin addresses.
- The plaintiffs are Noah Doe and two Wyoming-based LLCs, ABC Company and XYZ Company.
- The plaintiffs argue that the dormant Bitcoin addresses should be treated as abandoned or lost property under New York law.
- Multiple reports say the plaintiffs contend they found the addresses, reported them to the New York Police Department, and attempted to identify or contact the owners before filing suit.
- The case raises a broader legal question about whether inactivity in self-custodied cryptocurrency can be treated as abandonment under traditional property law.
- Several reports say a court ruling on ownership would not by itself give anyone technical control of the Bitcoin, because moving the funds would still require the private keys for those addresses.
How left and right are reading this
- Both agree
- The case turns on whether long-inactive, self-custodied Bitcoin can be treated as abandoned property under ordinary law, with both framings also recognizing that any ownership ruling would still stop short of technical control without the private keys.
- They split on
- Less a disagreement than a question of emphasis: the precedent of extending traditional abandonment doctrine into cryptocurrency, versus the plaintiffs’ effort to satisfy ordinary abandoned-property rules before asking a court to recognize ownership.
Context
What exactly are the plaintiffs asking the court to do?
They are seeking declaratory relief: a court order stating that the 39,069 dormant Bitcoin addresses and the coins tied to them legally belong to the plaintiffs, rather than an order that already transfers or unlocks the funds Bitcoinist.com,Crypto Economy.
Why is this case getting attention beyond the parties involved?
Reports describe it as a test of how existing property law applies to dormant, self-custodied digital assets. The outcome could help clarify whether long-inactive crypto can ever be treated as abandoned property under state law FinanceFeeds,Blockonomi,Cryptonomist.
If the plaintiffs won, would they automatically be able to move the Bitcoin?
Not necessarily. Multiple reports note that Bitcoin ownership on the network is controlled by private keys, so a legal declaration alone would not let someone transfer coins from those addresses without the keys Crypto Economy,COINTURK NEWS,Crypto News Austral….
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