Silk Road Sellers Around The Globe Getting Arrested
from the as-expected dept
This is hardly a huge surprise, but following last week's arrest of the alleged mastermind behind the hidden online market Silk Road, law enforcement agents across the globe have been arresting various Silk Road users (mainly drug dealers). As summarized by Gawker:- In Seattle, the FBI arrested 40-year-old Steven Lloyd Sadler in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue. Under the name Nod, Sadler was allegedly one of the Silk Road's favorite dealers of cocaine, heroin and meth. Sadler was busted after one of his customers in Alaska was busted and started cooperating, according to Brian Krebs.
- In the UK, authorities arrested three men in their 20s and one man in his 50s on drug offenses related to the Silk Road. "More arrests are expected in the coming weeks," according to the BBC.
- In Sweden, two Helsingborg men were arrested for allegedly selling cannabis on the Silk Road.
Either way, expect many more such arrests, though it's doubtful that this will slow down such hidden markets. In fact, I wonder if the publicity around the Silk Road crackdowns will actually end up attracting even greater interest in this arena -- in part from more organized crime operations that can more effectively hide their actions.
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Filed Under: arrests, dark markets, drug dealing
Companies: silk road
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i am waiting for the DoJ or FBI to have some representative stand up there and state similar crap that came out over Dotcom!
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Oh, the sacred "platforms" ploy!
You're just trotting out your silly notion that internet "platforms" -- which anyone else calls businesses -- have NO responsibilty for what's on them. That's totally a weenie notion that exists only among little internet godlets who think that they can safely get money by being oblivious to crime. But tearly every court will find in such cases that obvious illegality makes the business liable TOO.
Masnicking: daily spurts of short and trivial traffic-generating items.
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Re: Oh, the sacred "platforms" ploy!
There are black markets in every city in the world.
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It's one thing to play the TechDirt 'stick it to the man' vibe to the hilt--it's another thing entirely when we know the guy was hiring out for a contract killing! Jesus...
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He gets that whole "innocent until proven guilty" thing that everyone is supposed to get.
Now, I'm not defending him, I would not be surprised if all charges are true and he's convicted on them.
But on the flip side I would not be surprised if some charges are false, trumped up to get a good excuse for taking out the middleman running a major hub so they could start rolling up the loose ends.
Either way the point is you really shouldn't be complaining about Mike using slightly more creative writing than throwing "alleged" all over the place like other media outlets do as part of their journalistic responsibility to not libel someone that has yet to be proven guilty in a court of law.
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This market could have been regulated, bringing in standards and revenues.
People keep dying of drug use, recently you get the Glee kid that was high profile.
Pursuing stupid people for being stupid and that don't pose a physical risk to others or property should not be a problem for the police, it is a social problem society should learn to deal with it.
There are far more dangerous people out there and resources are being wasted to go after those who probably can't even defend themselves let alone harm anyone.
Further illegality attracts the real dangerous people to it, taking away that market from them takes away their means to make money easily.
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Come on, that's almost enough to make me agree with OOTB on this one. The dude was a skeezebag who was taking out hits, let's not white knight him here. Are you fucking kidding?
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"They allege he is "the Dread Pirate Roberts," the Silk Road's mysterious founder"
"one of whom Ulbricht is alleged to have enlisted to kill a blackmailer."
"It was not the only time Ulbricht is alleged to have used the site to procure illegal services."
""In my eyes, FriendlyChemist is a liability and I wouldn't mind if he was executed," he is alleged to have written, before attempting to haggle down the price."
Mike's just doing the same thing that other media outlets do when discussing crimes that have not yet gone to trial.
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1. Not white knighting him. In fact, I pointed out the other alleged crimes. Just pointing out that it's questionable if merely running a platform should be illegal based on its uses.
2. We've only heard one side of the story, from a heavily biased party. Yes, that side looks bad, and if it turns out to be true, I totally agree with you. But, at the very least, we should wait until the rest of the story comes out. We've seen way too many times how the DOJ has spun stories that turned out to be less than claimed upfront.
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Exactly this.
And the DOJ creating false narratives does not help the idea that the Nation is under the Rule of Law.
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If the murder for hire allegations are true, it's still not the platform itself that is the problem it's the man that created it being an evil SOB. Maybe he could have worded that statement better. But I am assuming his point in that statement is that it isn't the technology that is the problem. The problem is moral and ethical one among its users.
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If killing another for a paycheck is bad - where does that place an all volunteer army who gets a paycheck?
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Right back at ya. How you could get 'white knighting' out of Mike's comment is completely beyond me.
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Thus, the Silk Road takedown will create more violent criminal organizations, not reduce them.
The long history of the war on drugs, has already proven this argument to be 100% factual and correct.
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Good old investigative work and not NSA sniffed out those behind this. Bad guys using computers will still be caught even without the NSA
This is the next napster and will spawn many copycats sending people into even darker corners.
Just the seizure alone of the Bitcoins. The government will not destroy but sell off thus showing a value and that the government dealing in and selling legitimizes them.
P.S. where are all the founders coins stashed.... they seized barely any of what the government says exists.
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I wonder if Sadler is the FriendlyChemist. Bellevue is fairly close to White Rock, BC.
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The FBI Infiltrated From The Top of the Supply Chain
Of course, by publishing misinformation, the FBI is trying to obscure the sordid truth.
One of the things which is emerging in the Biker--SUV case in New York is that a violent biker gang was full of undercover cops, one of whom has actually been arrested for personal participation in an attempted robbery.
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Disorganized by Secrecy
Remember, the sellers have had a week now to get away and disconnect themselves from their former lives. Some will. And no cop wants to be embarrassed because he wasn't able to prove his case "beyond a reasonable doubt".
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You see, the American Government is very scared of their people. We are armed and that is scary to them. We can defend ourselves, we are NOT some poor Nigerians or Iraqis living in dirt huts to be shot and killed on a whim. I have 8 hunting knives hidden. I have a Taser, Mace and a Shotgun by the front door. I am old and if my government is so scared of us, I am in danger and will remain armed. Hah I'm only in danger from my elected government.
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