John McAfee Launches Blog, Offers $25K Reward For "Real Killers" 377
An anonymous reader writes "The IT security pioneer John McAfee has launched a blog to document his life on the lam, as Belize police chase him down for suspicion of killing a neighbor. McAfee is using the blog to state his case, raise suspicions about Belize authorities and to offer a $25K reward to find the real killer or killers. From the article: 'McAfee writes that he is on run with a 20-year-old female named Sam, photos of whom are in the blog, along with a post from her. McAfee says a handful of friends and associates have been rounded up by police over the past week or so. His posts are filled with dramatic descriptions of his actions (including returning to his home in disguise to find police digging up his dead dogs and cutting off their heads) and lay bare his suspicions about Belize authorities. '"
Bath salts (Score:4, Insightful)
That is all.
Re:You'd think with his money, he could... (Score:5, Insightful)
She looks okay to me, kinda cute. As long as someone is at least average in looks, their personality counts for a lot more in the end. There have been women that I don't consider that attractive, that start looking more attractive once I get to know them. Then there have been women who I initially find attractive, that just repulse me once I get to know them.
Re:If he is so confident in his innocence (Score:4, Insightful)
He should defend himself in court.
I'm guessing things look a little different when it's oneself being falsely accused, even without taking into account whatever level of corruption is perceived in the local judiciary.
Re:If he is so confident in his innocence (Score:2, Insightful)
You seem quite confident in Belize's court system.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:If he is so confident in his innocence (Score:2, Insightful)
Have you ever been detained pre-trial in a third-world prison?
Re:Danger Signs (Score:4, Insightful)
I thought OJ was acquitted.
Re:This is what I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
If Belize is out for his head, why not just GET THE FUCK OUTTA THERE? Why the hell is this idiot still hanging around?
You would think that $25000 would be enough to grease the palms of the Mexican border guards, or hell just pay some drug runners to smuggle him to the US with their next shipment; if he is really being targeted and persecuted in Belize, the risk seems bearable.
And let this be a lesson for ya, it's all fun and games moving with your millions to a Caribbean tax shelter, until the local [cartel,corrupt police,militias, kidnappers, etc] come for you. Why not just keep your millions stateside, pay your taxes like a good boy, and get old and fat without these kinds of worries? Was there not enough suspense in that option?
Re:Somethings amiss.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to believe this, until, in the US, Guantanamo bay was setup, and people were rounded up and jailed with out charges for years.
Re:You'd think with his money, he could... (Score:2, Insightful)
I agree. As far as looks go, once a woman meets a certain standard, it doesn't matter how far above your standard she is.
Re:IANAL, but (Score:3, Insightful)
Since when does any of that matter!
People (read: upper management) buy insanely expensive software that sucks every day. A product like McAfee isn't popular because customers like it on the individual level, it's popular because it's sold via buzzwords at the enterprise level.
See also: any IBM software (rapsody, clearcase, clearquest, ..) and SAP
Ironically the guys who put care and effort into their software are the ones struggling, while the folks who put most of their budget into marketting are making a fortune selling junk that barely works.
Re:IANAL, but (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, the other possibility is that he's a crazy old man, and all of this is in his head.
None of the outcomes here are good.
Re:If he is so confident in his innocence (Score:2, Insightful)
That might be a good reason to live in a decent country instead of fleeing to some hell hole to cook drugs and nail jailbait.
Re:Danger Signs (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't matter. I wasn't at the scene or the trial. Were you? I do run into a lot of arm chair jurors around here. The verdict is the verdict.
Re:Somethings amiss.... (Score:1, Insightful)
Let's of course forget that these people are:
a) Not American citizens
b) Hostile enemies attacking our military personel
c) Likely to continue to pose a threat if released
d) all of the above
Re:This is what I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
It takes the guy who hung the power lines for your business to get electricity. It takes the guy who paved the roads for you, your products and your customers to move on. It takes the guys who defend the borders and those who guard your business at night. It takes actual employees unless your brave new business is a one-man miracle. It takes customers and it takes suppliers. And it takes someone to take the trash out.
You might like the "I need nobody" concept better, but it has no basis whatsoever in reality. Reality is that you either live in a village or redefine success as "I found tasty worms and outran the bear today".
Re:This is what I don't understand (Score:5, Insightful)
"Just enough government, and no more."
The problem is that's the motto of the anarchists, libertarians, capitalists, fascists, socialists and communists. The only distinction is on the definition of "enough".
Re:Somethings amiss.... (Score:4, Insightful)
b) It has turned out that several weren't actually hostile enemies attacking anyone.
c) If there is a threat, then it should be easily shown in a trial.
Here is a quick list of people who were held and determined not to be enemy combatants:
Sadik Ahmad Turkistani [wikipedia.org]
Adel Abdulhehim [wikipedia.org]
Sami Abdul Aziz Salim Allaithy [wikipedia.org]