A discarded hard drive containing 8,000 Bitcoin sits buried in a Welsh landfill, taunting its owner with $676 million in lost crypto. The desperate owner faces off against Newport City Council in a December High Court battle, armed with AI experts and robotic dogs for the excavation. Despite a £11 million recovery plan, the council won't budge, citing environmental concerns. This digital treasure hunt keeps getting weirder, with plans now including buying the entire dump.

A desperate man's digital fortune worth $676 million sits buried under mountains of garbage in a Welsh landfill. The story would be laughable if it weren't so painfully real – a discarded laptop hard drive containing private keys for 8,000 Bitcoin, carelessly tossed away in 2013 at the Docksway landfill in Newport, Wales. The hard drive now lies beneath 25,000 cubic meters of accumulated waste.
The case will finally see its day in court this December in the High Court. The owner isn't taking this loss lying down. After numerous failed attempts to convince local authorities, he assembled an impressive team of specialists, including AI experts and data recovery wizards. His latest scheme? A whopping £10-11 million recovery operation using drones and robotic dogs. Yeah, you read that right. Robot dogs sniffing for digital gold.
The Newport City Council isn't having any of it. They've consistently blocked excavation attempts, citing environmental concerns and, rather cheekily, claiming the hard drive became their property once it hit their dump. The High Court seems to agree, recently dismissing the claim for excavation and declaring it had "no prospect of success." Ouch.
But here's where it gets interesting. The owner's newest strategy involves trying to buy the entire landfill. Talk about a power move. He's even promising to transform the site into a park after retrieving his buried treasure. The cherry on top? A proposed community-owned mining facility. Similar to how mining rewards halve every four years, the stakes keep rising for this buried fortune.
The saga has captured worldwide attention, even landing a spot in a Richard Hammond documentary. Meanwhile, the owner's hitting back with a £495 million lawsuit against the council for denying access. The technical team believes there's an 80% chance the drive could still work if found, despite years of garbage juice marinating.
Time's ticking, though. As the landfill approaches closure, this digital treasure hunt is reaching its final chapter. Whether this ends as a tale of redemption or just another crypto catastrophe remains to be seen. But one thing's certain – somewhere under piles of Welsh rubbish lies either the world's most expensive piece of electronic waste or one heck of a payday.