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Government United States

Trump Considers Clemency For Silk Road 'Kingpin' Ross Ulbricht (thedailybeast.com) 169

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Daily Beast: In his final weeks in office before Joe Biden's inauguration, President Donald Trump is weighing granting clemency to Ross Ulbricht, the founder and former administrator of the world's most famous darknet drug market, Silk Road, The Daily Beast has learned. According to three people familiar with the matter, the White House counsel's office has had documents related to Ulbricht's case under review, and Trump was recently made aware of the situation and the pleas of the Silk Road founder's allies. Two of these sources say the president has at times privately expressed some sympathy for Ulbricht's situation and has been considering his name, among others, for his next round of commutations and pardons before the Jan. 20 inauguration of his 2020 Democratic opponent.

It is unclear if Trump has arrived at a final decision yet, but Ulbricht has gained some influential backers in the president's political and social orbit. Behind the scenes, he has the support of some presidential advisers, as well as criminal justice reform advocates with close ties to the administration and Trump family, including Alice Johnson, according to people with knowledge of the matter. "I've had documents forwarded to my contacts in the White House as early as February," activist Weldon Angelos, a former music producer and ex-federal inmate, said in a brief interview on Tuesday evening. "In the beginning of the year, [Ulbricht's] family had reached out to us for our support, and my organization and I have endorsed his full commutation, and I am hopeful that President Trump will commute his sentence in its entirety. This case has perhaps more support than I've seen in any case of this kind."

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Trump Considers Clemency For Silk Road 'Kingpin' Ross Ulbricht

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  • by GameboyRMH ( 1153867 ) <gameboyrmh&gmail,com> on Thursday December 17, 2020 @09:08AM (#60840782) Journal

    Maybe this is why Batman has to keep fighting the same villains all the time, in the Batmanverse every few years they get a total shitbag President who lets all the supervillains out of Arkham...

    So he's already released Rod Blagojevich, Joe Arpaio, and Roger Stone among and all the other criminal shitbags who worked with his campaign, who's next, Martin Shkreli? Maybe some far-right terrorists?

    • Shitbag?! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by I'mjusthere ( 6916492 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @09:21AM (#60840822)
      Trump is a proven liar, fraud, scam artist, adulterer, misogynist, traitor, someone who cares nothing for Democracy, corrupt, probably a pedophile (with Epstien), demagogue, bully, ostentatious, pretentious, egomaniac, small fingered vulgarian, and....I am out of breath.

      Calling him a shitbag is a complement.

      • All of that explains his war on justice.

        He wants to create an environment in which criminals are pardoned for reasons which should be patently obvious, and probably are to most of us.

      • by adrn01 ( 103810 )
        "Quasi-human lard homunculus"
    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      So he's already released Rod Blagojevich, Joe Arpaio, and Roger Stone among and all the other criminal shitbags who worked with his campaign, who's next, Martin Shkreli? Maybe some far-right terrorists?

      Well, Mike Flynn has gone full on Q crazy and he pardoned him, so that's pretty close to a far-right terrorist.

    • Batman is not an cop and brakes the cop rules so the villains are not in an real prison and if they good lawyers they can get off easy.

    • There has been reports of Trump inquiring if he can preemptively pardon himself and speculation wrt also doing so for his family and Rudy Guilliani https://www.npr.org/2020/12/02... [npr.org]

      • There has been reports of Trump inquiring if he can preemptively pardon himself...

        The Constitution says, "...and he shall have Power to grant Reprieves and Pardons for Offenses against the United States, except in Cases of Impeachment."

        He can pardon himself for any offense, provided he is not currently being impeached for that offense. However, he would have to list the offense for which he is pardoning himself and/or his family and friends. So basically, there would have to be a confession and/or conviction of some offense before he could issue a pardon for it.

        If he wanted to foreclose

        • I believe it's commonly held that you can only impeach someone while in office, so with a month to go I'd say chances are less than slim. The need to list crimes in the pardon isn't spelled out in the constitution but is generally assumed, just like not being able to pardon oneself. In the case of nixon, the pardon is pretty much a blanket pardon the clarification is in the preamble, but since it was never challenged it's a bit up in the air. I don't think Trump will try all this, but he's been unpredictabl

        • Whether or not Trump can pardon himself, or if he even tries it, it only applies to federal laws. Trump's worry is about New York state and he cannot pardon himself or anyone else over those laws.

    • Maybe this is why Batman has to keep fighting the same villains all the time, in the Batmanverse every few years they get a total shitbag President who lets all the supervillains out of Arkham...

      Are you implying that this is some Unbreakable universe, and he's actually trying to create a superhero like Batman by his actions?

    • who's next, Martin Shkreli? Maybe some far-right terrorists?

      Himself, of course.

  • by fph il quozientatore ( 971015 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @09:10AM (#60840794)
    Totally unrelated, but I wonder if there have been any recent large bitcoin transactions taking place...
  • Why not commute the sentences of all non violent drug offenders in federal custody then?

    Oh right, because this is about money and/or influence (not necessarily doing the right thing) and they have neither.

    • Why not commute the sentences of all non violent drug offenders in federal custody then?

      Oh right, because this is about money and/or influence (not necessarily doing the right thing) and they have neither.

      More than money - moralizing to appease his pseudo-Christian Evangelical base.

      I need to write a new New Testament where Jesus turns hay into Weed.

      That will appease those people. They have NO problem with wine, but weed; which is a mush safer drug? Nope.

      And we can go into relatively recent history and get into the race aspects of weed. https://www.cnn.com/2020/06/19... [cnn.com]

      • Thanks for taking the time between bong rips to post this little gem, but take a look around. US is legalizing marijuana like crazy. Probably more than is responsible.
        • More, as in the level of legalization within any state goes too far, or simply because "too many" states legalized it?

          I think the reality is you pretty much have to legalize production and retail sales regardless. Any half-way measure that makes personal possession and use not subject to any criminal penalties inevitably produces a large scale black market to supply the now legal possession and use.

          It really makes no sense to only partially legalize marijuana, plus you lose massive amounts of potential tax

          • We've had legal marijuana up here in Canada for over two years. Initially the chief problem was supply, and the black and gray markets prospered. Then there was the learning curve in the provinces, which lead to all kinds of regulatory chaos. Some provinces went with private sales, some went with distribution through government liquor stores. Where private sales were allowed, both Federal and provincial licensing rules made it a right pain for suppliers and resellers.

            There's still a lot of illegal pot out t

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          Federal government is not, and that's where the obstacle comes for the industry. No federally chartered financial institution can handle their money, so it gets pushed into the very lucrative money laundering market that makes people like Robert Rubin insanely rich.

      • by U0K ( 6195040 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @11:38AM (#60841246)
        You could write what you want. It's not likely to convince them one way or the other.

        The problematic people don't really care that much about what the scripture says.

        The Bible texts do describe the type of person a lot of Evangelicals are as "Pharisee". Pharisee are usually depicted as the the bad guys by being self-righteous, thinking themselves to be morally superior and being judgmental in looking down upon others.
        • Matthew 6:5-6: "And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you."

          Now I wonder if this applies to the televangelists praying loudly on television, while exhorting their viewers to support Trump

          • by U0K ( 6195040 )
            If you're asking about televangelists and megachurches there's the event "cleansing of the temple", which appears in the Gospel of John, Luke, Mark, and Matthew of the New Testament.
            As far as I know it's the one and only instance in the Bible where Jesus used some kind of force to apply what he believed to be right.

            According to scholars this was also the one event where Jesus went too far by alienating the establishment of the organized religion, leading to his incarceration and ultimately to his executi
  • Wow, I seriously have no words.
  • There's no political advantage in this. Republicans are not the party of drug legalisation. Ulbricht has a few followers, but not the kind of numbers needed to have real influence in politics. No personal connections with strings to tug. There's nothing Trump would gain from this.

    • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

      There's nothing Trump would gain from this.

      Back when Trump was considering this, Ulbricht had a fuckton of money hidden away. Maybe he still does, but not as much [wsj.com] as he might have earlier promised.

    • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @10:22AM (#60840994)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The Republicans ought to be the party of drug legalisation, at the federal level because states rights. Sometimes it seems that states rights only extends as far as giving states the right to oppress women and gay people, and nothing else.

      • State's rights only matter when they states align with your politics. As I've long held, neither major party has a solid set of ideals to stand behind, as their ideals keep changing every single election. Republicans are neither for small government nor large government, but whichever size of government serves their purposes at the moment. They want small government when it comes to their own personal freedoms, but they want big government when it comes to the restricting the freedoms of others (gay marr

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by dj245 ( 732906 )

      There's no political advantage in this. Republicans are not the party of drug legalisation. Ulbricht has a few followers, but not the kind of numbers needed to have real influence in politics. No personal connections with strings to tug. There's nothing Trump would gain from this.

      He has connections. He knows or can find people who do the dirtiest of work. That's fairly useful if he could convince such people that he wasn't a narc.

  • Keep him in for life.

  • Snowden? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @09:53AM (#60840912) Homepage

    Any chance of a pardon for Snowden? It's already pathetic that "Peace Prize" Obama didn't grant him one...

    • Pardoning Snowden was something he talked about in August. Seems to me there's nothing to indicate that Trump appreciated Snowdens whistle blowing and the speculation has been that it would be to get back at the security agencies; I don't know why he'd wait until the end of the term to do that so I don't think it's going to happen.

  • "...I have endorsed his full commutation, and I am hopeful that President Trump will commute his sentence in its entirety. This case has perhaps more support than I've seen in any case of this kind."

    Sure, because cases of this kind NEVER have the slightest "support" for clemency. And by "support" he mean "corrupt interest", the only currency Trump ultimately deals in. Also, this is an "ex-federal inmate" we're talking about here. Since when are felons experts in what justice is?

  • Note that many of the positive/hopeful remarks appear to date back to the beginning of 2020, back when Ulbricht still had something that Trump desperately, personally needs. But wasn't his big Bitcoin stash successfully obtained by the FBI just a couple months ago? Ulbricht might not have a way to make good on his end of the deal.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • I think tricky. Trump does not trust others, so he would not pardon on the promise of the payoff. Ulbricht may also be untrusting, so he may not wish to transfer the bt to trump before the pardon. Kind of a catch 22. What we need is some sort of middleman to hold the money until trump pardons him. I'll do it. Really I'll give trump the money after the pardon. Really I will. After my 90% cut.
  • Maybe Trump should pardon everyone especially those who were railroaded by the System for daring to challenge the authority of the System.

    • especially those who were railroaded by the System for daring to challenge the authority of the System.

      How many of those are there?

  • Eh. What did this guy really do to deserve his sentence anyway? I mean, all he did was deliberately facilitate the sale of drugs, stolen credit card info, child p--n, weapons and assissination services. A perfect candidate for a Trump pardon. I mean, he would be right at home with the organization. Clearly a wholesome US patriot who has a bright future by Trump's side! Probably fake news anyway. MAGA!

    I can see it now. Trump on his second term, with Stephen Miller and Ross Ulbricht in his cabinet. Perf
  • I thought I read that Ulbrict tried to hire a contract killer to whack someone he had a falling out with. Is that someone to pardon?
  • Follow the money (Score:4, Informative)

    by rwyoder ( 759998 ) on Thursday December 17, 2020 @11:56AM (#60841312)

    Trump never does anything unless there is something in it for himself.

  • ... test for a presidential commutation or pardon:

    Is it legal?

    If yes, move on.

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      Actually, the Constitution makes it clear. The test is:

      "is it an impeachment?"

      If no. Move on.

  • Just do a blanket pardon for all past crimes by citizens of the US. Clean slate.

  • How much money is on offer for this "consideration"? Need to know for the rap sheet.

  • Is there a legitimate reason President Trump would pardon this guy?

Ya'll hear about the geometer who went to the beach to catch some rays and became a tangent ?

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