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Free Ross Ulbricht

178 points| linksbro | 3 years ago |freeross.org

116 comments

order

root_axis|3 years ago

Several posts on this thread (as well as TFA) have suggested the hitman for hire was slander to paint Ulbricht in a bad light. This is not true.

> At the sentencing hearing, the district court resolved several disputed issues of fact. For example, because Ulbricht contested his responsibility for the five commissioned murders for hire, the district court found by a preponderance of the evidence that Ulbricht did in fact commission the murders, believing that they would be carried out. The district court characterized the evidence of the murders for hire, which included Ulbricht's journal, chats with other Silk Road users, and the evidence showing that Ulbricht actually paid a total of $650,000 in Bitcoins for the killings, as “ample and unambiguous.” App'x 1465.

From https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-2nd-circuit/1862572.html

yashap|3 years ago

Agreed - from a purely personal morality argument, I’m convinced this guy did indeed pay for contracted killings for 5 people. Yeah, some of the cops setting up the sting were corrupt, I can certainly see why it was sketchy in court and prosecutors decided to drop this angle (they had him on massive drug dealing anyways), but from my personal moral POV, dude paid for murders. I’m not shedding any tears about Ross being in jail.

pcthrowaway|3 years ago

He was never charged or convicted of murder, and 2 of the agents on his case were corrupt and dishonest. This is enough to at the very least sow reasonable doubt.

I'm all for him being imprisoned if guilty of attempted murder, but he absolutely should not still be in prison for the charges that he was found guilty of.

chonkerz|3 years ago

I get the "Free Ross" campaigners are trying to persuade us, and I think his parents are largely behind it which I sympathize with, but the manner in which they gloss over FIVE ATTEMPTED MURDERS goes beyond mere bias.

Keep Ross In

boomboomsubban|3 years ago

I don't get this. The prosecutors decided not to press the hitman charges, so would the defense have even tried to gather evidence that it was false? Wouldn't that automatically make the preponderance of the evidence suggest his guilt, as only the evidence suggesting his guilt would have been presented?

weare138|3 years ago

This. While I do think his sentence was excessive that man was in no way innocent.

0xy|3 years ago

So the courts didn't determine he did it by the only standard that actually matters, guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

It is not a contradiction to say he could've been guilty by preponderance of evidence and innocent because of reasonable doubt.

You either trust the high standards of criminal culpability, or you don't -- in which case why do you believe his other guilty verdict can be trusted?

yieldcrv|3 years ago

All discord in his empire was fabricated by corrupt government agents who both served time for this, information that was kept from Ross and his defense and the jury during trial

The corrupt agents staged hits in a makeshift studio, just to extort money from Ross, use the money for personal gain such as landing a movie deal with Fox

Cases have been completely dropped for less

The prosecutor and judge found a strategy that is resilient, that doesn't make it correct

djmips|3 years ago

Is that enough to convince you 100% that it happened?

jjallen|3 years ago

This is a good lesson about not forgetting that much of life is not binary. Here we have someone who was convicted of doing illegal things. There is also strong evidence that he hired and paid someone to kill five people.

So the question isn't free or don't free him. The question is "how long should he be in jail for?". There's a middle ground here.

Many people, including the OP website just say "free" him. I don't know. That is a binary option which implies total innocence. And I don't think total innocence is the case here.

So the question really needs to be: for how many years should this guy be in prison for. And the answer to me, primarily because he was planning on killing five people is quite a long time. Certainly longer than the ten years or so he's been in there.

[edited for some increased readability and formatting]

tchalla|3 years ago

I wish we though about almost everything probabilistically instead of raging over false binaries.

q1w2|3 years ago

For attempting to kill 5 people and for indirectly dealing in some horrible drugs, counterfeit money, and illegal guns... 20 years seems reasonable.

pcthrowaway|3 years ago

> And the answer to me, primarily because he was planning on killing five people is quite a long time.

Would you agree that he shouldn't be in prison for the crimes he was convicted of at least? Because he wasn't tried or convicted of murder-for-hire (yet?)

zamalek|3 years ago

In my opinion, he should be in there not a minute longer than it takes to rehabilitate him.

But we penalize, not rehabilitate, and some people are beyond rehabilitation.

Synaesthesia|3 years ago

It was totally a political trial with many exaggerations and the government trying to "set an example".

- First-time offender

- All non-violent charges

- Two life sentences plus 40 years without parole

>Ross Ulbricht is condemned to die in prison for creating an anonymous e-commerce website called Silk Road. An entrepreneur passionate about free markets and privacy, he was 26 when he made the site. He was never prosecuted for causing harm or bodily injury and no victim was named at trial.

>Users of Silk Road chose to exchange a variety of goods, both legal and illegal, including drugs (most commonly small amounts of cannabis). Prohibited was anything involuntary that could harm a third party.

>Ross was not convicted of selling drugs or illegal items himself, but was held responsible for what others sold on the site.

ddalex|3 years ago

Didn't this guy try to hire a hitman ?

vkou|3 years ago

> >Ross was not convicted of selling drugs or illegal items himself, but was held responsible for what others sold on the site.

I'm pretty sure that running an illegal drug marketplace is also illegal.

SideburnsOfDoom|3 years ago

>creating an anonymous e-commerce website called Silk Road. An entrepreneur passionate about free markets and privacy,

That wording really goes out of it's way to sound like this might conceivably be legal, or at least not knowingly criminal.

scoofy|3 years ago

“The Silk Road was fine”

-HN

duped|3 years ago

I think it's disingenuous to say the Silk Road was used for anything but selling black market goods, predominantly drugs.

It's fine to say that someone shouldn't go to prison for life for running a business centered on selling drugs without violence (hitman non withstanding), and I think you could even argue that the drugs got more dangerous for kids once it went down (there was a decent time period when kids didn't have to worry if what they bought as cocaine, MDMA, or aderall was just meth). But trying to claim the Silk Road wasn't Amazon for drugs is just dishonest.

roenxi|3 years ago

I was initially unhappy about the situation, but on reviewing the opinion [0] of the judge of the appeal it seems reasonable. It is uncomfortable that the judge effectively sentenced him for something he wasn't charged with, but if that judge saw evidence that he tried to plan the murder of multiple people there aren't really many alternatives.

It does seem like bad form that the prosecutors didn't charge him with murder, it leaves open the question of whether the evidence was actually flimsy and Ulbricht's team didn't challenge it properly because they didn't think it was especially relevant. I assume the details of the opinion would reveal the thinking on that if I read it closely.

[0] https://www.leagle.com/decision/infco20170531115

DoItToMe81|3 years ago

I think people who facilitate the sale of community destroying hard drugs deserve punishment, but this trial was a farce. The media ran ceaseless stories making it sound like he was selling guns to terrorists and child abuse material. There's no way he could have been fairly judged by a jury with how prevalent that type of reporting was.

ryan_j_naughton|3 years ago

> I think people who facilitate the sale of community destroying hard drugs deserve punishment

Alcohol is undeniably a hard drug. It:

1) is extremely physically addictive

2) causes many overdoses and deaths. More than opiates or cocaine.

At the same time, there is tons of compelling evidence that:

A) making alcohol illegal in the 20s/30s didn't decrease consumption at all and simply increased the danger of consuming tainted alcohol.

B) that prohibition fueled the rise of organized crime in the US

C) that countries with decriminalized drugs and harm reduction policies actually have reduced drug consumption, like Portugal.

Thus, your statement seems entirely incorrect. It actually seems that punishing those who sell hard drugs actually makes it worse for everyone.

leggomuhgreggo|3 years ago

Hoping it's not too much of an imposition, I'd like to pose a series of rhetorical questions about criminological policy, which may not be new territory, but I hope will, nonetheless, elevate the discussion

What does 'deserve' mean?

How do you distinguish it from vengeance?

If the idea is that it has deterrent value, how do we measure that?

Also why are we trying to deter? What's the social cost of the behavior his platform helped facilitate?

How much did his being a party to that behavior contribute to its prevalence? Is there any evidence suggesting the behavior wouldn't have been enacted through alternative intermediaries?

Most importantly: Is there any unintended secondary cost to society, as a result of bringing punitive repercussions on intermediaries that are incidentally party to an undesired behavior?

In Policy Analysis one often sees a pattern where punitive policies exacerbate either the undesired behavior or associated antisocial behaviors

It's counter-intuitive but the correlation between criminalization and increased antisocial activity — and indeed net social cost — is quite strong.

In my view the only sensible approach to criminology is "consequentialism" with all punishments being informed by therapeutic approaches to reduce future harm — or "Harm Reduction"

When we allow ourselves to be guided by "scale balancing" rationales, it's just too easy for that to turn into sadism and worse "mob" sadism — where any view of proportionality (vague and aspirational to begin with) is abandoned until some "Lord of the Flies" moment of cruelty provokes social reflection.

Anyway thanks for considering my perspective.

P_I_Staker|3 years ago

Nope it's the institutions that trample on people and violate their civil rights that should be suffering punishment. The government, medical, and mental health community are highly discriminatory and don't respect freedom of religion.

It's created a perfect storm of death in destruction in the USA. The system needs to be reboot and built to protect citizens, not abusive / incompetent doctors, insurance companies.

Drug addicts are people that deserve to be respected, not spit on and turned away. Even if you aren't a drug addict, you can really quickly have your rights stripped away. Drug use, even repeated, isn't always addiction. Drugs are often a critical component of our health.

I've become increasingly aware of the role the medical industry is playing in exacerbating drug abuse and suicide. So many people are driven away from care and into a suicide/jail or other health problems like morbid obesity.

achenet|3 years ago

> I think people who facilitate the sale of community destroying hard drugs deserve punishment

I'd argue Instagram has done more damage to human relationships and communities than MDMA, despite the former being around for much longer.

Really, when we look at the forces "destroying our communities", it's not so much the drugs as the the reasons people take them - alienation caused by post-modern industrial capitalism, face-to-face interaction replaced by screen time, a society that values "success" over happiness, health and connection... the drugs are a symptom.

If you take morphine because you have a broken bone, the issue is the broken bone.

If people drink themselves to death because they are lonely, the issue is the loneliness.

froh|3 years ago

oh yes, the dual tongues!

to add, how many of the domestic terrorists killing children in schools with guns did buy them legally? vs illegally? and how many homicides were done with legal guns? vs illegal guns? and suicides?

Jasper_|3 years ago

This is the guy who thought about whether to sell cyanide to people or not, and decided that, yes, Silk Road should sell it ("myself" is Ross):

> myself: cyanide has a bad reputation

> myself: there are plenty of legitimate uses

> inigo: so we're going to allow it?

> myself: its bad for image/PR

> myself: i think we're going to allow it

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/01/silk-road-trial-...

You can't represent this guy as just selling some drugs, maybe. He knew what he was doing, and documented all of it.

whywhatwhere|3 years ago

He attempted to kill multiple people, and was completely indifferent to the harms caused by his marketplace. Indeed he profited massively from them.

Prison is the right place for Ross Ulbricht.

Just because he committed all his crimes using a computer doesn't mean he should be let off for these crimes.

etchalon|3 years ago

This will never happen. I don't know why people pretend it might, or why this site shows up on HN every few months as if it's new information.

AndyMcConachie|3 years ago

You could say all the same things for any other victims of America's drug war. IMO the drug war should end and all non-violent drug offenders should be released.

But the American economy depends on prison slavery, and they need the drug war to continue creating slaves.

https://unicor.gov/

from|3 years ago

He probably could’ve got 15-20 years if he worked out a deal but he had very ineffective counsel. With RDAP and the First Step Act and potentially compassionate release for COVID he could be out by now.

dutchbrit|3 years ago

Didn't Ross hire a hitman?

boomboomsubban|3 years ago

>Ross was smeared with false, unprosecuted allegations of planning murder-for-hire that much of the media amplified through inaccurate and sensationalized reporting. The allegations were never charged at trial, never proven, never submitted to, or ruled on by, a jury, and eventually dismissed with prejudice.

boomskats|3 years ago

The article linked here addresses that multiple times. That accusation, largely overinflated by the media, was dismissed with prejudice. He was never even charged with it.

heromal|3 years ago

[deleted]

big_red|3 years ago

“All nonviolent charges” He hired hitmen over the dark web how is that not violence?

COGlory|3 years ago

He wasn't charged with that.

microtherion|3 years ago

Presumably the hitmen were asked to kill with kindness.

blobbers|3 years ago

How about the rest of the sentence is given to SBF.

scoofy|3 years ago

You can’t give a gigantic middle finger to the social contract and expect to be treated with kid gloves.

I think the sentence was excessive, but then again I didn’t run a website for years for the expressed purpose of facilitating and profiting from the illegal international drug trade.

The idea that he would just be released and not then immediately charged by another nation is naive.

I’m genuinely shocked that this is getting attention from anyone but libertarian ideologues.

Edit: I’m fine with your downvotes. Nobody wants to discuss the level of taboo breaking the Silk Road caused simply because it’s actually not entirely difficult to operate. People get made examples of.

whatitmatteryo|3 years ago

Yes! Free Ross! Think about all the little children who won't be turned into porn stars without his marketplace! It's not fair to them!

blackoil|3 years ago

Don't worry about the kids, they have Youtube/Instagram and Tiktok, lot's of places for twerking semi-nude.