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Maryland Indictment Says Silk Road Founder Tried To Arrange Murder of Employee

Robotron23 writes "Further charges have been made against Silk Road founder Ross William Ulbricht, aka 'Dread Pirate Roberts'. Yesterday saw the shutdown of Silk Road, a website Ulbricht founded which specialized in the sale of illegal items such as recreational drugs. As well as paying for a hit on a forum member, Ulbricht later requested an undercover agent murder an arrested employee of Silk Road, terming it 'the right move.' Upon receiving staged photos of torture and eventually the corpse, Ulbricht paid in full."

10 of 294 comments (clear)

  1. Credible, unfortunately. by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People who think they've invented a better society are the nastiest sort. The biggest problem is that they're stupid - they create a simplistic, inadequate set of rules to live by. Whether they're underground libertards (as here), staunch conservatives or flag-waving Leninists, they soon find that their utopia isn't quite working out the way they planned.

    And then they start killing people.

    1. Re:Credible, unfortunately. by Joining+Yet+Again · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Don't strawman, now. Trying to create a better society is a very different thing from thinking you've invented one.

    2. Re:Credible, unfortunately. by LoyalOpposition · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Trying to create a better society is a very different thing from thinking you've invented one.

      Can you explain how? I mean, it seems to me that they are inextricably linked. Suppose Mr. Legislator wants to try to create a better society. His necessary first step is to hypothesize how to do so. Once he has his hypothesis he has two choices--either evaluate whether the hypothetical society is better than current society or try it. You've forestalled the former, so he has to proceed with the latter. Once it's tried, he must evaluate the results. The possible evaluations are the hypothetical society is worse than ex ante, it's equal, or it's better. You've forestalled the latter. It seems to me that the only way you allow a person to try to create a better society is if he a priori is doomed to failure.

      ~Loyal

      --
      I aim to misbehave.
    3. Re:Credible, unfortunately. by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Dude's got my vote.

      Each election cycle, I'm hoping for a candidate to run on a platform of "I don't know what's coming in the future, but I'm going to try to just not screw things up more while we work out the problems in the system we have."

      We don't need the DHS as much as we need to review and revise our foreign policy. We don't need gun control laws as much as we need owner education. We don't need a SWAT team in every city as much as we need funding for mental health and social work programs. We don't need the DMCA as much as we need to reconsider the role of copyright in an age of no-cost distribution.

      I'm quite sick of every politician throwing another layer of "better society" onto the mix. There are too many conflicts already.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    4. Re:Credible, unfortunately. by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think I personally have invented a better society, but collectively Europe and North America have done pretty darn well for ourselves recently. Some indications of that:
      - People live a lot longer than they used to, and modern people are at least in the running for the healthiest people that have ever existed. (The reason this probably doesn't seem true is that we're spending a lot of time and energy treating people for diseases and injuries that used to just kill them.)

      - Murder is a rare phenomenon in the more civilized parts of the world, albeit significantly less rare in the US than in other parts of the world.

      - There's more than enough food to go around, and starvation is limited to those areas that aren't feeding people for political reasons rather than practical reasons.

      - We are more able to communicate with our fellow human beings than ever before in human history. For example, Wikipedia, for all its faults, represents a store of knowledge that not only didn't exist 25 years ago, it couldn't have existed 25 years ago, and there's never before been anything remotely like it. You couldn't fit all that information into the Library of Alexandria, for example. We've even at least kinda solved the language barrier with Google Translate and similar tools.

      - We're no longer considering forced labor to be completely acceptable. There's still some of that going on, but it's highly illegal. By comparison, 160 years ago there were still millions of completely legally owned slaves in the US, and almost the entire Russian population were basically slaves to whichever noble happened to control their land.

      - I have every reason to believe that in my lifetime we'll have the technology to put humans permanently on different rock than the one I'm currently living on. That would have been a silly claim 75 years ago.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    5. Re:Credible, unfortunately. by PraiseBob · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So somebody takes a loaded gun, points it at your head, and pulls the trigger trying to kill you. But it turns out the gun was loaded with blanks, so you survive. Was that attempted murder? It wasn't a "real" bullet, so there must not be a crime by your logic. I can assure you that the legal system considers trying to hire a hitman who is secretly an undercover agent, a crime. I know a person who is still alive because the "hitman" hired to kill him was a cop. The person who was trying to kill him was convicted and is currently in prison for attempted murder.

  2. Re:bitcoin value by jeffmflanagan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It appears that SR was a tiny part of the BTC economy. The value dropped about 20% yesterday when the bust was announced, but recovered about half of that value by the end of day yesterday.

  3. Re:Toooootally Didn't See That Coming by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Right. Crimes with victims were reserved for the admins.

    BTW only an idiot thinks that forged IDs etc is "victimless". What happens to the unlucky sods who get mortgages taken out in their name?

  4. Re:Feds ACTUALLY sold a kilo of coke by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In other words, they broke the law. Usually in drug buy stings they claim that they never lost control of the drugs so it was OK. In this case, they sold something that was illegal and it was completely out of their control for a period of time.

  5. Re:bitcoin value by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I won't rejoice about the end of a free market like Silk Road, but I have no problem with it taking a dump if it is run by someone willing to murder people over it.