TL;DR:
A New York lawsuit is testing one of Bitcoin’s strangest legal questions: can long-dormant coins be treated like abandoned property if no one has moved them for years? Filed on May 1 by Noah Doe and two Wyoming-based LLCs, ABC Company and XYZ Company, the case asks a court to declare ownership over 39,069 Bitcoin addresses. The plaintiffs say they found and reported the assets to the New York Police Department under state lost-property law. For crypto markets, the claim collides with Bitcoin’s basic design, because ownership is enforced by private keys, not court paperwork.
A New York suit by “Noah Doe” and two Wyoming LLCs seeks a court order confirming their ownership of 39,069 long‑dormant Bitcoin wallets, arguing the wallets are legally “abandoned” property they found, reported to NYPD, noticed on‑chain and in the press, and then claimed… pic.twitter.com/34gH1Jqxxx
— Sani | TimechainIndex.com (@SaniExp) May 24, 2026
The complaint frames the dormant wallets as seizable property comparable to traditional bank accounts, including addresses tied to early miners, unidentified entities and even addresses attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto. The 901-page filing also lists the well-known “12c6D” address associated with Satoshi and “1Feex,” the address linked to the Mt. Gox hacker. The scale is eye-catching: the listed addresses reportedly hold about 3.7 million BTC, valued near $285 billion across old wallet clusters. The lawsuit is enormous on paper, yet its practical force depends on whether legal abandonment can exist without access to keys.

Even a favorable ruling may not move a single coin. Castle Labs analyst Noveleader argued that Bitcoin has no mechanism to reassign funds without a private key, making any court victory largely symbolic unless the coins later move to a regulated custodian or exchange. The plaintiffs’ notice strategy also faces a technical problem. Many old Satoshi-era coins sit in Pay-to-Public-Key outputs, while notices were reportedly sent to related Pay-to-Public-Key-Hash addresses that often hold no value. The legal theory runs into protocol reality, where notice, custody and control do not map neatly onto blockchain scripts or dormant ownership claims.
The wider stakes reach beyond this case. Around 3.5 million BTC, worth roughly $271 billion, has been dormant for 10 years, while 6.6 million coins, worth about $577 billion, have not moved for more than five years. Some may belong to deceased holders, lost-key victims or simply investors with extreme patience. Treating dormancy as abandonment would therefore unsettle assumptions around self-custody. Bitcoin’s silence does not clearly mean surrender, and this lawsuit now asks a court to interpret inactivity in a system intentionally built so possession is proven cryptographically, not by public appearances alone today.