The
U.S. Justice Department announced charges on Monday against two former
federal agents accused of stealing the digital currency bitcoin during
the investigation of the underground drug marketplace Silk Road.
Carl
Force, a former Drug Enforcement Administration agent, and Shaun
Bridges, a special agent with the Secret Service, were charged in a
criminal complaint filed in San Francisco federal court with offenses
including wire fraud and money laundering.
Silk
Road was an underground website where people bought drugs and other
illicit goods using bitcoin digital currency. By the time authorities
shut it down in October 2013, Silk Road had generated around $200
million in sales, prosecutors said.
Authorities
said it was operated by Ross Ulbricht, 30, under the alias “Dread
Pirate Roberts.” A federal jury in Manhattan found Ulbricht guilty in
February of charges including conspiracy to commit drug trafficking and
money laundering.
Force,
46, and Bridges, 32, belonged to a Baltimore-based federal task force
investigating the Silk Road. Force had a prominent role in the probe,
authorities said, as he was the lead undercover agent in communication
with Ulbricht.
But
prosecutors said while Force spoke with Ulbricht using an officially
sanctioned alias, he also created unauthorized online personas to
communicate with “Dread Pirate Roberts.”
Using
those aliases, Force extorted $250,000 from Ulbricht and later offered
to sell him information about the government’s investigation for
$100,000, the complaint said. Prosecutors said Force also stole $90,000
worth of bitcoins that Ulbricht paid him in under an officially
sanctioned alias used for the undercover investigation.
Authorities
said Bridges, 32, meanwhile diverted to his personal account over
$800,000 worth of bitcoin that he controlled during the Silk Road
investigation.
Force
was arrested in Baltimore on Friday and appeared in court there on
Monday. Bridges surrendered on Monday and was released after appearing
in court in San Francisco.
Joshua
Dratel, Ulbricht’s lawyer, in a statement on Monday said that
prosecutors only revealed information about the “monumental scandal”
five weeks before trial after keeping the investigation secret for nine
months.
“It
is clear from this complaint that fundamentally the government’s
investigation of Mr. Ulbricht lacked any integrity, and was wholly and
fatally compromised from the inside,” Dratel said.
Steven
Levin, a lawyer for Bridges, said he maintains his innocence. Ivan
Bates, Force’s attorney, did not respond to a request for comment.
The case is U.S. v. Force, U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, No. 15-mj-70370.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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