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Silk Road bitcoin-stealing Secret Service agent re-arrested

Arresting officers found bags containing Bridges’ passport and a notarised copy of his passport, along with corporate records for three offshore entities in Nevis, Belize and Mauritius.

Rogue Secret Service agent Shaun Bridges, a former member of the team that eventually managed to shut down the black market website Silk Road has been arrested at his home in Laurel, Maryland.

The arrest came on the day before he was supposed to be handing himself in to the police to start his prison sentence.

Though Bridges helped expose the criminal activities being orchestrated by the website and identified the organisers, he became seduced by the powers invested in him. Eventually he was prosecuted on charges of money laundering and obstruction of justice after it was discovered that he had diverted $800,000 worth of bitcoins from Silk Road into his own account.

During his arrest, according to court documents seen by The Guardian, officers found bags containing Bridges’ passport and a notarised copy of his passport. They also found corporate records for three offshore entities in Nevis, Belize and Mauritius.

He also had several Secret Service-issued bulletproof vests which the state contends had been stolen from the government.

As reported previously in Naked Security, Bridges and DEA agent Carl Force appeared to have taken their acting roles as criminals too seriously.

Bridges had helped to identify Ross Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road who traded under the identity of “Dread Pirate Roberts”. Force, also posing under cover as a criminal, made regular contact with Dread Pirate Roberts (DPR) under the alias “Nob”.

In 2013, Ulbricht was arrested and charged with conspiracy to traffic drugs and in 2015 was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison without parole.

DPR suspected Silk Road employee, Curtis Green, of stealing the $800,000 in bitcoins that had gone missing. So DPR contacted “Nob” (Carl Force) in order to hire a hitman. Green was, in fact, a state witness and Force and Bridges faked Green’s death.

Force and Bridges also siphoned off bitcoin funds given to them by the government for use in the investigation. An investigation, this time into the DEA agents, found they had set up personal accounts and the bitcoin investment funds Quantum Investments and Engedi LLC, all of which were ring-fenced and registered in their own names.

Force is currently serving a 6 and a half-year sentence, and Bridges is in custody.

According to the government’s motion detailing his arrest, Bridges is considered a flight risk, so it’s unlikely he’ll get bail.

Ross Ulbricht is currently appealing his conviction, arguing that he did not receive a fair trial after evidence regarding the corrupt agents was improperly suppressed. His lawyers also argue that evidence favorable to Ulbricht was withheld from his defense team.

Image of handcuffs courtesy of Shutterstock.

5 Comments

I’m generally supportive, rather than critical, of law enforcement. But it is painful to read or hear of so many cases in which a real criminal walks away from his or her crimes because some cop(s) or prosecutor(s) crossed a line somewhere in the performance of their duty. Trying to cheat in the name of the law Is self-defeating in the long run.

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There was no “trying to cheat in the name of the law” it was Stealing 800,000 for himself, just like every scumbag thief out there.

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Cheating is behaving dishonestly and/or violating rules. The Bitcoin snatcher obviously did that. Furthermore, though he was the main focus of the story, another federal agent was also named as a crook. Both worked behind a badge. And my comment clearly refers to other cases, in a general sense, as well. So what’s your beef with the phrase you quoted, and likely the negative comment rating? Get up on the wrong side of the bed this morning?

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Abuse of power…by every ‘law enforcement’ & ‘law making’ entity, politicians (and their supporters), public utilities, priests, those who oversee the lottery, the whole ‘banking’ system, business people with power over others, the list is seemingly endless. From the very top to the very bottom. We hear of & see it all the time now…all the time. So much so that we now have absolutely no sensible reason to trust any of them & anything they say but meanwhile they continue to allow themselves the bs facade of bold-faced trustworthiness. These two have watched those around them get away with so much worse than stealing bitcoins, the example was basically ingrained over the years. Can only imagine how they feel now…maybe betrayed by the betrayers. Their is nothing funny about this any direction I look.

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