Ross Ulbricht's Lawyer Says FBI's Hack of Silk Road Was "Criminal"
First time accepted submitter apexcp writes Trading blows with the prosecution, defendants for accused Silk Road mastermind Ross Ulbricht continues to press for the exclusion of evidence seized during what he says is an illegal hack an awful lot like the one that got Weev 15 months in prison. "The government posits two standards of behavior: one for private citizens, who must adhere to a strict standard of conduct construed by the government, and the other for the government, which, with its elastic ability to effect electronic intrusion, can deliberately, cavalierly, and unrepentantly transgress those same standards. Yet neither law nor the Constitution permits rank government lawlessness without consequences."
roman_mir told me none of this would have happened if only we let the free market decide !
it's not illegal!
The solution is obvious. Ross Ulbricht should run for president and win.
"To declare that in the administration of criminal law the end justifies the means to declare that the Government may commit crimes in order to secure conviction of a private criminal would bring terrible retribution."
"Our government... teaches the whole people by its example. If the government becomes the lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law; it invites every man to become a law unto himself; it invites anarchy."
Prove anything by multiplying Huge Number times Tiny Number
Maybe he can get a court in Texas. They are blooming idiots over there and would let this guy off if only to try and make the POTUS look bad. Stupid mofos.
Silk Road Kingpin or not, I'm rooting for Ross here. The fact of the matter is that the Government has made a habit out of adopting these types of double standards and ignoring the civil rights that are guaranteed to us as citizens of the United States. If Ross' legal team can bring the government down a notch or two, I'll be forever grateful to them.
With this double standard behaviour the government is undermining its own legitimacy.
When a warrant is signed by a judge, Law Enforcement has every right to force execution of the warrant by just about any means they see fit to use. If that means they break down your door, toss in a flash bang and do thousands of dollars damage, so be it. If that means they hack into your web server, they get to do it.
This is a PR attempt by the lawyer to gin up the press in an effort to get public opinion on their side in hopes that the prosecutor might be tempted to lower the charges or something. Assuming there was a warrant, the evidence is valid and can be used. Best this guy can hope for is a good plea deal, which I doubt looks very good right now. Think of this as a hail Mary pass by the home team on homecoming night when they are down by 3 and only have 10 seconds left to play. Chances are this won't work and they are going to loose.
"File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
JUST USE ADBLOCK YoU LaZY MoTHeRFuCKiNG PiSS OFF SHiT
That shouldn't surprise anyone familiar with the lawless American Administration.
I guess at this point we are finding out just exactly where the limits of "government of the people, by the people, for the people" really are.
[nothing else needs to be said]
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
JUST USE ADBLOCK YoU LaZY MoTHeRFuCKiNG PiSS OFF SHiT
No, just use your fucking hosts file.
all conduct which is not published is implicitly condoned.
The whole point of the first bit of Article II Section 1 is to give the President and his appointees powers ordinary schmucks don't have to execute the law. These powers are somewhat restricted by the law enforcement Amendments, but are still a whole hell of a lot broader then the rights ordinary citizens enjoy. Which means if you're a criminal defendant, and you're telling a Judge that evidence should be thrown out because it would have been illegal for someone who isn't the government to do it, that ain't gonna work. Weev and other hackers have Rights, but they don't have powers, so what they are allowed to do is totally irrelevant to what the government is allowed to do in a criminal case. They're intentionally wasting the Court's time.
If they were making a Fourth Amendment Argument that could get interesting because the data belonged to an American; which means the Feds should have had a warrant. However, the Supreme Court has created something called a under a "good faith exception," which allows the government to use it's search and seizure powers on anyone it reasonably suspects of not being American, and I sincerely doubt that most Icelandic webservers are rented out to dudes from Peoria.
can you guess which Republican Governor was indicted this year in his own Capitol city?
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Remember the old adage; don't do the crime if you can't do the time. Ross needs to stop whining and pull up his big boy pants and take what he's got coming. If it hadn't been the US gov't it would have been another gov't that took him down. Ross should be happy it was the USA. Some of the less polite gov'ts would have just wacked him, dumped him in the ocean, and saved the legal expenses.
Your offtopic spam is objectively worse than every single video ad that ever has appeared or will appear on Slashdot.
And no, you won't "just stick to Reddit". Nobody who posts stupid threats like that ever follows up on them, because they really want attention, not the changes they claim to be demanding.
Why are there ironiquotes around the word 'criminal' in the title?
You want fairness ?
Cops can lie to you!
Fair is you kill some one the state kills you.
If you beat some one up should you be beaten?
Total fairness he paid for a hit. The government should pay for one against him.
You do not get an even chance to break the law.
It is not surprising at all that Ulbricht's attorney is pressing hard to try to get all of the significant evidence excluded. It is a standard (if desperate) legal tactic, especially when the evidence is extremely damning. This case looks like it will essentially be decided by what evidence is allowed, since the evidence the government has should make convictions a slam dunk. Getting the court to believe that the FBI's hack was illegal (and perhaps uncovering their true methods) is about the only thing that is going to get the guy off.
This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
Has the defense presented any actual evidence that the site was hacked?
The Ars Technica article says: "Experts suggested that the FBI didn't see leakage from the site's login page but contacted the site's IP directly and got the PHPMyAdmin configuration page. That raises the question of how the authorities obtained the IP address and located the servers." ... but that doesn't make sense. If having the IP address was all they needed to identify that it was indeed the droids - sorry, server - they were looking for, well, that's easy enough these days: there are less than four billion routable IP addresses, so try them all. It might take a few days or a few weeks or even a few months, depending on what resources you can throw at it, but it's no big deal. So what am I missing? Or are the defense just blowing smoke?
Your honor my client is a scoundrel criminal and you should give him the maximum punishment for his crime. At least Slashdot should use neutral sources regrading legal proceedings. But most of the blogger media is lazy and just quotes the lawyers for each side.
Silly rabbit! Government makes the laws. It doesn't follow the laws.
Chelloveck
I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
A problem with this statute is that it allows people we know to be guilty to get off.
The police must be punished for breaking the law. However, so to must OTHER criminals they have uncovered... even if the evidence was obtained illegally.
What this means in practice? Someone at the FBI needs to go to jail for invasion of privacy or whatever the jury convicts him of committing. Period - end of story.
And Ross needs to go to jail as well because whatever you might feel about the drug trade, the man ordered an assassination of one of his employees. That's attempted murder. Was it all a police entrapment? Possibly. And if that is what happened and he didn't do it on purpose then I'll let him off on that count.
However, if he did do it intentionally but it was all a police set up... then again, maybe someone at the FBI goes to jail for entrapment and Ross goes to jail for attempted murder.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
How can you ever really have rules, if you have rulers?
Liberty.
> The government posits two standards of behavior: one for private citizens ... and the other for the government
That is the very definition of a government! Obviously, the state cannot be better than the sum of its citizenry, therefore gov't must press the populace towards an ever-increasing standard of legal and moral behaviour, in order for the state become more and more advanced from a philosophical standpoint.
The problem is, anglo-saxon (anglo-american) countries are built upon common law. That has never actually been a set of laws per se, but the simple fact that prehistoric saxons, celts and various ~ "people of Boudica" were essentially uncivilized tribes or more like gangs of thugs, in which environment violence and theft was the daily norm of life and death. Common law developed as a set of loose rules to provide a very minimum baseline of behaviour, on top of which criminality could continue unhindered. To this day, the anglo-american culture admires criminality and equates it with progress, while being peaceful and unagressive is seen as a sign of stagnation and stupidity. A criminal who is able to escape punishment by being cunning and rich enough to bribe judge/witnesses/politicians is widely considered a hero and not even the relatives of murder victims will stand up to exact blood revenge.
That is why americans do not want the gov't to hold them to higher moral and legal standards. They are thugs and they want to continue their uncivilized manners, hoping to get rich from a life of working hard in crime. It looks like a very efficient, if cruel approach to material development, that brought USA to to the position of "alpha male" global thug in just 225 year. I think what could wreck this, would be a truly major natural disaster, whereupon US social cohesion, if any, would fall apart. (E.g. gays fleeing the M9 California quake pitchforked by mid-west people.)
In contrast, continental Europe is based on ancient roman law combined with napoleonic code and it imposes ever-increasing regulations on the life of citizenry to make them more moral and law-abiding citizens, helping to build and keep thousands of years of civilization.
This is a very deep philosophical divide, which is seldom emphasized. The english language is simple to learn, but afterwards, it takes a lot of time for a continental european person to really understand the vastly different thought processes of anglo-americans. I think the divide is almost as big as if the little green men landed in saucers and tried to communicate with us. To be precise, extra-terrestrials wielding laser pistols, because the anglo-americans are very vile and worsening. I think it's in no small part because jewish-run Hollywood instills them with TV-programmed firearm violance and fornicative sexuality, ad nauseum. There is little else then murder investigation fiction airing on TV, with many sadistic perpetrators shown in an idolized light.
I'm still waiting for the defense lawyer that says..."Your honor my client is a scoundrel criminal and you should give him the maximum punishment for his crime."
It will never happen because it would be illegal for the lawyer to do so. The worst a lawyer can do to his client if he knows his client is guilty and cannot bring himself to put forth his best efforts in defense is recuse himself from the case... and even this can have repercussions for the lawyer such as have his case reviewed by the Bar Association.
You're arguing a strawman argument, or rather a non-existent man argument. IF they had had a warrant, what they did would not be a problem. But they "hacked" into the server "exceeding authorized access" in violation of the CFAA WITHOUT A WARRANT. Hence it was a criminal act, by their own definition.
Now if you remove the CFAA, or clarify the law so it can't be misused to prosecute innocent uses, and uses that security professionals would normally use when looking for weaknesses in systems and not from a maliscious or criminal intent. Then what they did is probably ok. But as it stands now, what they did was criminal. It's a stupid, broken, clueless law, but it is the law and they would definitely prosecute someone for doing what they did.
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Ha! I remember playing whack-a-mole with my hosts file. Some people need a hobby, I guess, but I'd rather let someone else do the work of keeping track of every new ad and tracking vector that pops up. When ad blocking software first appeared, I jumped on it. Thank you, writers of ad blocking wares throughout the years! Besides, do you really imagine the sub-literate moron who made that post, an idiot too lazy or stupid to install ad blocking software, whose Karma is so bad on this site that he doesn't have the option to turn off ads, a person who writes and behaves like a child, do you really think he'll be able to figure out hosts file editing?
-- sudon't
Air-ride Equipped
There are plenty of hosts file managers that handle all the shit things like ABP do.
In the meantime, we're going to wait for you to stop holding your breath, because the lack of oxygen to your brain is making you extra stupid.
He tried to kill me with a forklift!
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