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Abstract:James Howells tried to sue a council for access to the site or get £495m in compensation.
James Howells tried to sue Newport council to gain access to the landfill site or receive £495m in compensation
A judge has thrown out a mans attempt to sue a council to recover from a rubbish tip a Bitcoin hard drive that is now worth about £598m.
James Howells had argued that his former partner had mistakenly dumped the hard drive containing a Bitcoin wallet in 2013, and he wanted to access the site and recover the cryptocurrency.
But Newport council asked a High Court judge to strike out Mr Howells legal action to access the landfill or get £495m in compensation.
Judge Keyser KC said there were no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim and no realistic prospect of succeeding at a full trial.
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During the hearing in December the court heard how Mr Howells had been an early adopter of Bitcoin and had successfully mined the cryptocurrency.
As the value of his missing digital wallet soared, Mr Howells organised a team of experts to attempt to locate, recover and access the hard drive.
He had repeatedly asked permission from the council for access to the site, and had offered it a share of the missing Bitcoin if it was successfully recovered.
Mr Howells successfully mined the Bitcoin in 2009 for almost nothing, and says he forgot about it altogether when he threw it out.
The value of the cryptocurrency rose by more than 80% in 2024.
But James Goudie KC, for the council, argued that existing laws meant the hard drive had become its property when it entered the landfill site. It also said that its environmental permits would forbid any attempt to excavate the site to search for the hard drive.
The offer to donate 10% of the Bitcoin to the local community was encouraging the council to play fast and loose by signing up for a share of the action, said Mr Goudie.
In a written judgement the judge said: I also consider that the claim would have no realistic prospect of succeeding if it went to trial and that there is no other compelling reason why it should be disposed of at trial.
The landfill holds more than 1.4m tonnes of waste, but Mr Howells said he had narrowed the hard drives location to an area consisting of 100,000 tonnes.
Mr Howells has speculated that, by next year, the Bitcoin on his hard drive could be worth £1bn.
He told BBC Wales outside the court hearing in Cardiff last December that he believed in his case and was willing to take it all the way to Supreme Court.
Bitcoin is often described as a cryptocurrency, a virtual currency or a digital currency and is a type of money that is completely virtual - there are no physical coins or notes.
You can use it to buy products and services, but not many shops accept Bitcoin and some countries, including China and Saudi Arabia, have banned it altogether.
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