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FBI seizes Silk Road and Arrests Founder

rAJJIN

Super Moderator
Mar 1, 2006
3,346
1
0
As soon as I heard about the "Dark web" at what it was all about....
I knew it was not a place to be jacking around. Child Porn, Heroin, X,
hackers and any other sick or twisted or Smuck thing you can think of.

Not a good place for a bodybuilder to go unless he want un needed attention.
I was warned to not even be googling the name.
 

fitnesskatz

New member
Oct 4, 2013
8
0
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u.s.
fitnesskatz

I guess their competitor sites will be getting an extreme boost in business coming. There are still 3-4 of those sites out there going. Wonder how long before the Feds get to those?

they blackhole them so fast its crazy man,,,ive been using that orbot on my droid you can download from tor it acting crazy last night so my wife and i was looking at some this shit on there which lot of it really sick the child porn and that bs but it still lot there but they blackholed five different url's in just few mins,,,
 

Phoe2006

Banned
Jun 10, 2013
5,267
0
0
I think plenty of us are in the same vote T and just steer clear if those sites due to the ramifications that come along with some it the sites domains and servers. Ie child porn makes me sick and all those looking at it or participating in it should be out to death
 

moparfreak360

New member
Oct 11, 2012
17
0
0
Any place that even shares the same sentence as child porn, I'm going to steer clear of. Sounds like a place for sickos....not to mention if you want drugs who needs to go online? Every county has a dealer! Lol
 

AnaSCI

ADMINISTRATOR
Sep 17, 2003
8,625
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Lessons from Silk Road: don't host your virtual illegal drug bazaar in Iceland | The Verge

When it comes to protecting your virtual black market from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), some countries are better than others. As it turns out, Iceland is probably not where you want to be. While the country may have protected WikiLeaks from the Americans, it's not harboring the recently busted illegal drug bazaar Silk Road. The Reykjavik Metropolitan Police have confirmed that they handed over data on the Silk Road at the request of American authorities.

It's unclear how much information Iceland turned over, but the FBI claims two Silk Road servers were based there. Icelandic police say the site was actually hosted there. Since Iceland does not have a formal Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT) with the US, it appears that the FBI negotiated a special one-time agreement in order to get the data.

It still looks like the bulk of the information that broke open the case did not come from Iceland, however. The complaint says "an image of the Silk Road Web Server was made on or about July 23rd, 2013, and produced thereafter to the FBI" as a result of a request made to a foreign country under a formal MLAT.

That image, or bit-for-bit copy, of the Silk Road server gave authorities access to private messages between the Silk Road's owner and other members of the site. It was instrumental in seizing the site and arresting Ross Ulbricht, the man police allege was behind the Silk Road.

Runa Sandvik, who works on the anonymizing network Tor, has been trying to figure out which country handed over that server image. She initially ruled out Iceland because it does not have an MLAT with the US. Various Silk Road content was also hosted in the US, Latvia, and Malaysia. Latvia and Malaysia are both MLAT signatories. If the request was indeed made under an MLAT, it looks like the image either came from one of those countries or another that has not been revealed yet by the FBI.

Another possibility is that the FBI's complaint erroneously claimed the request was made under an MLAT, when the reality was less formal. Either way, future virtual drug kingpins now know that Iceland is no safe haven.

Correction: An earlier version of this story said that Malaysia is not an MLAT signatory; that is incorrect. Malaysia and the US signed an MLAT in 2009.
 

AnaSCI

ADMINISTRATOR
Sep 17, 2003
8,625
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Accused Silk Road boss just hired a high-profile national security lawyer | The Verge

Ross Ulbricht, the man accused of running the underground drug website Silk Road, has finally hired an attorney to represent him on charges of narcotics trafficking conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, and computer hacking conspiracy. Ulbricht was represented by a public defender at first, but friends and family have managed to find a hotshot lawyer to take the case: Joshua Dratel, a New York-based attorney who has built his career on cases related to national security.

Dratel has defended more than 30 accused terrorists, including David Hicks, an Australian who was arrested in Afghanistan and detained at Guantanamo. He also represented an accountant convicted of working with al-Qaeda and one of the men charged with the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa. His background defending some of the most unsympathetic targets of government prosecution, along with his strong belief in personal freedom and opposition to the security state, made him a natural choice for Ulbricht's defense.

Reached by The Verge this morning, Dratel says he has not spoken to his client yet. Ulbricht is still sitting in jail in San Francisco waiting to be transferred to New York, where the major charges against him have been filed. No court dates have been set yet. Dratel is unsure of whether he will also defend Ulbricht on separate charges filed in Maryland, which are expected to be tried next. In court in San Francisco, Ulbricht denied that he was the Dread Pirate Roberts, Silk Road's pseudonymous owner-operator.

"It's too early to really start piecing together," Dratel says. "Other than that he's not guilty."
 

AnaSCI

ADMINISTRATOR
Sep 17, 2003
8,625
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Silk Road's main competitor shuts down indefinitely | The Verge

Black Market Reloaded, the digital black market that was the largest competitor to the recently-busted Silk Road, just announced it's closing and refunding users' money. In order to deal with the influx of Silk Road refugees, Black Market Reloaded spun up some virtual private servers (VPS) hosted by a third party. According to a Black Market Reloaded administrator, one of the VPS administrators leaked the site code — a huge security breach that could compromise the owner's identity.

"This means I can't operate anymore," admin backopy wrote to users. As for when Black Market Reloaded might relaunch, he answered "early 2014 at best. I said one month, give or take, but it looks like I'll take about 1 month to do a clean close at the current site, after sorting disputes and all that that's left." Attempting to visit Black Market Reloaded now redirects to a forum.

Black Market Reloaded was known as the more hardcore version of Silk Road, selling guns in addition to illegal drugs. It was growing fast even before the FBI seized Silk Road. But it seems the golden age of illicit marketplaces, the class of outlaw stores protected by the anonymizing network Tor, may be coming to an end. Black Market Reloaded is actually the third high-profile marketplace to fall in less than two months: Atlantis Market closed before Silk Road.

It's all on you now, Sheep Marketplace.
 

Little Man

Registered User
Jul 17, 2005
507
0
0
somewhere, US
All interesting stuff. I never went to any of these sites because I have no need for drugs or guns. I also thought most of it would be scams.
 

AnaSCI

ADMINISTRATOR
Sep 17, 2003
8,625
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Ross Ulbricht, creator of the underground website Silk Road, which let users anonymously buy and sell anything from drugs to hacking tutorials, was sentenced Friday to life in prison after he made a tearful plea for leniency.
Ulbricht, who is 31, was convicted in February on seven counts ranging from money laundering to drug trafficking. He could have been sentenced to only 20 years.

U.S. District Judge Katherine B. Forrest was clear that she was making an example of Ulbricht in part to deter others from committing similar crimes.
"There must be no doubt that no one is above the law," Forrest said. "You, as the defendant, have to pay the price."
She said anyone considering following in Ulbricht's footsteps needs "to understand there will be very serious consequences."
Rejecting Ulbricht's request for mercy during the nearly three-hour hearing in Manhattan federal court, Forrest said of Silk Road, "It was carefully planned life's work. It was your opus. You wanted it to be your legacy and it is."
The judge also addressed the 97 letters that had been written to the court by Ulbricht's family and supporters seeking leniency.
Forrest acknowledged that Ulbricht didn't fit the profile of a typical criminal, but said she had no interest in making a judgment "on which of you to know" -- the Ulbricht portrayed in the letters or the convicted criminal standing before her.
The judge also said there was "no doubt" that Ulbricht paid for murders of those who had threatened Silk Road. Prosecutors had charged Ulbricht with commissioning six murders-for-hire but those charges were dropped and there is no evidence that these murders were ever carried out.
Forrest ordered Ulbricht to forfeit $183 million.
Earlier in court, Ulbricht made an emotional appeal to Forrest for leniency, insisting he wasn't a greedy person and asking for a second chance.
"I wish I could go back and convince myself to take a different path," he said. "I've ruined my life."
lyn kirk ulbricht
The Ulbricht family leaving court Friday.
Ulbricht, a college grad from Penn State, explained that he created Silk Road to empower people by providing them with "privacy" and "anonymity."
Ulbricht also apologized to the family members in court of two people who had died from overdoses from drugs they had purchased on Silk Road.
Richard, a father from Boston whose son, Bryan, who was identified only by his first name, died after using drugs bought on Silk Road read a letter he'd written to the court. "I strongly believe my son would be here today if Ross Ulbricht hadn't created silk road," he said.
Related: Bitcoin fallacy led to Silk Road founder's conviction
Silk Road was a first of its kind -- an unregulated online marketplace where buyers paid using Bitcoin, an electronic currency that is hard to trace. In the three years before it was shut down, it facilitated over 1.5 million transactions totaling $214 million.
Before Friday's hearing, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara painted Ulbricht as a kingpin of a drug trafficking enterprise who made things easier for drug buyers and sellers.
"Ulbricht bears responsibility for the overdoses, addictions, and other foreseeable repercussions of the illegal drugs sold on Silk Road," Bharara wrote in a letter to the judge. "It does not matter that he did not personally handle those drugs; neither would a traditional kingpin."
Ulbricht, who has been jailed since his arrest in October 2013, never testified at his trial. He expressed his remorse in a letter to the judge.
"If I had realized the impact my creation of Silk Road would ultimately have on the people I care about most, I never would have created Silk Road," Ulbricht wrote. "I created it for what I believed at the time to be selfless reasons, but in the end it turned out to be a very selfish thing to do."
Ulbricht's lawyer, Joshua Dratel, said he would appeal the case.
 

srd1

AnaSCI VET / Donating Member
Feb 19, 2013
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Makes more sense now but still he didnt play a direct part in the things on there did he? I mean he created a place were illegal shit could be facilitated but would that be like the ceo of at&t going to prison cause drug dealers and hitmen used at&ts network to make calls to do their business?
 
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Marshall

AnaSCI VIP / Donating Member
Oct 31, 2012
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I would imagine at some point in the appeal process it will get reduced.
 

K1

Blue-Eyed Devil...
Jun 25, 2006
5,046
1
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Makes more sense now but still he didnt play a direct part in the things on there did he? I mean he created a place were illegal shit could be facilitated but would that be like the ceo of at&t going to prison cause drug dealers and hitmen used at&ts network to make calls to do their business?

No bodies found but they have messages from him paying for at least 9 hits on people (I believe it was 9)?!

Also there were inner circles of that site where you could actually buy children...Imagine someone kidnapping your child and paying some asshole to sell them on their site...I bet none of you would be thinking that a life sentence was being too harsh then!

I think most of us look at this from a roid user/seller's perspective...We need to look at it from an entirely different level...This guy was making millions, hundreds of millions off of dealing with the lowest forms of illegal activities possible!
 

srd1

AnaSCI VET / Donating Member
Feb 19, 2013
2,311
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midwest usa
Holy shit had no idea! Selling kids wtf....fuck a life sentence take him outside the courthouse and put a bullet behind his ear and be done with him.