DOJ Cleared To Sell $6.5 Billion In Bitcoin Seized From Silk Road (cryptobriefing.com) 39
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Crypto Briefing: The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has been authorized to sell approximately 69,370 Bitcoin seized in connection with the Silk Road darknet marketplace, a haul currently valued at around $6.5 billion, DB News reported Wednesday. The decision is set to end a years-long legal dispute over the BTC stash's ownership. On December 30, a federal judge ruled in favor of the DOJ's request to liquidate the crypto assets, the report said. Battle Born Investments, which had asserted a claim to the Bitcoin stash through a bankruptcy estate, ultimately failed in its bid to delay the sale.
As noted, the group had pursued a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request seeking the identity of "Individual X," who initially surrendered Bitcoin, but the effort also proved unsuccessful. Battle Born's legal counsel criticized the DOJ's handling of the case, alleging the department employed "procedural trickery" in its use of civil asset forfeiture to avoid scrutiny. The DOJ, in its arguments before the court, cited Bitcoin's price volatility as motivation for seeking a quick sale of the seized assets. A DOJ spokesperson, when contacted, stated, "The Government will proceed further consistent with the judgment in this case."
The update comes after the US Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal challenging the seizure of the Bitcoin stash, which was brought by Battle Born last October. The decision likely paved the way for the US government to sell Bitcoin, which was valued at $4.4 billion at the time. The US Marshals Service is expected to manage the liquidation process, which, if confirmed, will be one of the largest sales of seized crypto in history. Further reading: Judge Rejects Man From Retrieving $750 Million of Bitcoin From Landfill
As noted, the group had pursued a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request seeking the identity of "Individual X," who initially surrendered Bitcoin, but the effort also proved unsuccessful. Battle Born's legal counsel criticized the DOJ's handling of the case, alleging the department employed "procedural trickery" in its use of civil asset forfeiture to avoid scrutiny. The DOJ, in its arguments before the court, cited Bitcoin's price volatility as motivation for seeking a quick sale of the seized assets. A DOJ spokesperson, when contacted, stated, "The Government will proceed further consistent with the judgment in this case."
The update comes after the US Supreme Court refused to hear an appeal challenging the seizure of the Bitcoin stash, which was brought by Battle Born last October. The decision likely paved the way for the US government to sell Bitcoin, which was valued at $4.4 billion at the time. The US Marshals Service is expected to manage the liquidation process, which, if confirmed, will be one of the largest sales of seized crypto in history. Further reading: Judge Rejects Man From Retrieving $750 Million of Bitcoin From Landfill
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Would it not be socialism if the money went to US citizens?
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No. One pretty standard definition of socialism is
Any of various theories or systems of social organization in which the means of producing and distributing goods is owned collectively or by a centralized government that often plans and controls the economy.
This doesn't have anything to do with "the means of producing and distributing goods", so it's not socialism.
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I fear you have suffered a Class 1 Irony Failure.
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Go ahead, game that out. What was the irony?
The GP was obviously being sardonic, but this is orthogonal to the "socialism or not" axis. It was a dumb attempt at irony, but failed to land because -- like most attempts to defend socialism -- it was grossly ignorant.
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Public parks? Schools? Libraries? If you are so scared of a word you dont know what is behind it, then I suggest you not discuss it as if you know it.
Same as being against "Obamacare" and wanting to keep the ACA.
I argue those that are against socialism are more ignorant of what it consists of than those that joke about it. Because at least they know what it means.
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Any of various theories or systems of social organization in which the means of producing and distributing goods is owned collectively or by a centralized government that often plans and controls the economy.
If you're going to throw out that definition of socialism and use a different one, you're going to have to share it with the class; otherwise what you're saying is a non-sequitur at best, and intention equivocation at worst.
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Would it not be socialism if the money went to US citizens?
It would certainly be fair, as the citizens pay for the US federal government (and their state governments, and others). And if the US federal government had the citizens' interests at heart, it might well share the money among them. Admittedly it would only buy a cheap meal, a short evening at a bar, or the cheapest item of clothing. Or maybe a book or two, or some music. But if shared within a family it could do some genuine good.
Not going to happen in a nation that worships wealth, and believes that as m
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They send it to Ukraine to kill people with.... Not a dime of it will be spent in the USA. BET. ;-)
Under the current administration, I wouldn't take your bet. But, as it's unlikely the sale will be finalized within 10 days of this posting, I wouldn't be surprised if much of it went to Russia instead of Ukraine. Same purpose (to kill people) but different recipient.
Re:I bet 10$ (Score:5, Interesting)
They send it to Ukraine to kill people with.... Not a dime of it will be spent in the USA. BET. ;-)
Nah. It'll just go into the general fund. Given that the general fund is operating at an annual deficit of $1.4T (which Trump aims to increase, though 2025 will be Biden's budget), it will merely reduce the 2025 deficit by about 4%.
Well, that assumes they'll get $6.5B for it... which they won't. How much the price of BTC is reduced by this sale will be interesting. BTC has enough market volume to take that sale these days, but it's still very volatile and the price is held up by the fact that a lot of BTC is held by hodlers who won't sell for any reason except to exchange with other hodlers to boost volume, which means that BTC price will take a bigger hit than market volume would normally predict.
I really hope they dump the entire lot in a single sale. Economists will be able to write many interesting papers.
Make everybody angry. (Score:2)
Where does all that money go? (Score:2)
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Income to the government general fund does not have a name tag associated with it as to where it goes. Ever try to tag your income tax?
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Cocaine and hookers. Or at least "state dinners" and "entertainment." Which is usually code for, "Make a big public fuss, then have coke and hookers in private."
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Probably somehow gets laundered through Ukraine and comes back to politicians.
This is how FTX worked and why SBF was the #1 donor to the DNC.
And why they arrested cz for blowing the fraud wide open.
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Like all income of the federal government it goes to the US Treasury. Congress will eventually pass laws that authorizes spending.
State piracy (Score:1)
Apparently, the US govenment can simply help istelf to whatever assets it feels like. A few billion dollars of someone else's bitcoin; any cash the police find while rummaging through a law-abiding US citizen's car after a probably illegal stop and search; $300 billion or so in Russian assets, foolishly entrusted to Western financial institutions... and on and on and on. I suppose that when a government is over $30 trillion in debt, it grabs whatever it can.
"Take what you can; give nothing back". - "Pirates
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The government can seize assets associated with crime. I'm not familiar with this specific case but if they seized the assets and there was indeed a crime... it's legal.
No crime required, under civil asset forfeiture if they think it's proceeds of a crime they can take it and you have to fight to get it back. It doesn't require a conviction or even charges to be brought.
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It was seized assets from crime. But don't let facts get in the way of your ignorance.
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Look up Asset Forfeiture, no crime is required. Even in states (like mine) where forfeiture is banned, the DOJ still launders (to this day) money siezed by state and local law enforcement.
Who's their client? (Score:2)
The curious thing in this story for me is that Battle Born are claiming the crypto is theirs, that they were owed something from a bankruptcy case gone bad.
Quite ballsy to take on the US government and trying to convince a legal system that the client that owned them money was doing legitimate honest business on the dark web, but hey.
Put it on a hard drive and send it to landfill (Score:2)
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Throwing away those coins props up the market by increasing the artificial scarcity.
Selling - even threatening to sell - those coins should show us just how solid Bitcoin actually is. A lot of the big action in Bitcoin is fake to fool the rubes and keep the price climbing.
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Throwing away those coins props up the market by increasing the artificial scarcity.
Selling - even threatening to sell - those coins should show us just how solid Bitcoin actually is. A lot of the big action in Bitcoin is fake to fool the rubes and keep the price climbing.
I guess the question is can an exchange or exchanges cash out that much, or even a significant percentage at once? Looking at a trading volume graph [blockchain.com], that's a significant multiple of daily volumes and absent a market maker unlike to be able to be liquidated at once.
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the coins will just be bought by one or several of the ETF's for liquidity. It won't be market affecting. Your thesis about bitcoin is incorrect.
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Oh look everyone, a cultie!
Bitcoin reserve (Score:2)
I'd bet that Trump blocks this sale and claims that these 69,370 Bitcoins are now that Bitcoin Reserve he promised his crypto bro supporters.
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Ten Days (Score:1)
Ross is getting pardoned in ten days
How "coincidental" that they're rushing now.
Is the Federal Agent who stole some of the bitcoin and entered fake testimony against Ross still in prison?