anyone into bitcoins?
Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, today announced the forfeiture of approximately 29,655 Bitcoins (which, at todays Bitcoin exchange rate, are worth approximately $28 million) that were seized from the Silk Road server, as well as the forfeiture of the Silk Road hidden website. The Silk Road hidden website and the Bitcoins that were forfeited yesterday had been seized in connection with the civil forfeiture action previously filed in Manhattan federal court on September 30, 2013, seeking the forfeiture of all assets of Silk Road, including its website and all of its Bitcoins because those assets allegedly were used to facilitate money laundering and constitute property involved in money laundering. In addition to the civil action, a criminal Complaint against Ross William Ulbricht, a/k/a Dread Pirate Roberts, a/k/a DPR, a/k/a Silk Road, the alleged owner and operator of the Silk Road hidden website, was filed in September 2013 in Manhattan federal court charging him with one count of narcotics conspiracy, one of count of conspiracy to commit computer hacking, and one count of money laundering conspiracy. The forfeiture order was signed yesterday by United States District Judge J. Paul Oetken.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: With todays forfeiture of $28 million worth of Bitcoins from the Silk Road website, a global cyber business designed to broker criminal transactions, we continue our efforts to take the profit out of crime and signal to those who would turn to the dark web for illicit activity that they have chosen the wrong path. These Bitcoins were forfeited not because they are Bitcoins, but because they were, as the court found, the proceeds of crimes.
The Silk Road hidden website was designed to enable its users to buy and sell illegal drugs and other unlawful goods and services anonymously and beyond the reach of law enforcement. In connection with the civil forfeiture action, and in addition to the Bitcoins that were forfeited yesterday, the Government seized an additional 144,336 Bitcoins (which, at todays Bitcoin exchange rate, are worth over $130 million) that were found on computer hardware belonging to Ulbricht. Ulbricht has filed a claim in the civil forfeiture action, asserting that he is the owner of the Bitcoins found on his computer hardware, and contesting the forfeiture of those Bitcoins.
http://www.justice.g.....eiture.php
question for you, how can they seize them? I thought that was the big selling point with bitcoins, they are kept in a crypto wallet and were impossible for someone to steal? Second question, what do you think if any impact this will have on the price?
1 Nov ’12
Impossible would seem a stretch, especially when we are seeing larger businesses starting to accept them as payment. To me it is difficult to see bitcoin as separate from illegal or at the least secretive activity. The TOR servers and dark or deep web don't have much in the way of redemptive value, and at least appear to be a haven for a strong criminal element. Although bitcoin does provide a valid argument at the possibility of a strong and stable currency heretofore free from government involvement. IMO it is the strength of the bitcoin that is leading to these seizures by government entities, I tend toward cynical, and think that the value of the coin rather than the crimes related to them were what attracted the USAG office.
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