Houston Chronicle

Man behind online black market for drug sales gets life in prison

- By James Queally LOS ANGELES TIMES

Ross William Ulbricht, the San Francisco man convicted of running an undergroun­d website that allowed drug dealers to peddle their wares to countless customers online, will spend the rest of his life in federal prison, a judge ruled Friday.

Ulbricht was sentenced to life in prison Friday, according to a spokeswoma­n for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Manhattan. His defense attorney, Joshua Dratel, was not immediatel­y available for comment.

Ulbricht, who was known to federal agents by his online alias “Dread Pirate Roberts,” was convicted in February for allowing more than $180 million in drug deals to take place on Silk Road, an online black market that was replete with narcotics sales.

Ulbricht’s attorneys have long argued that the 29-year-old California native was framed by other Web-based dealers who were able to conceal their identities.

A Manhattan jury, however, was not swayed by that argument. Ulbricht was convicted after only three hours of deliberati­ons in federal court in New York in February.

Silk Road surfaced in 2010, and federal agents began infiltrati­ng the site one year later. Homeland Security Agent Jared Der-Yeghiayan, who was first tipped off to the site’s existence during a 2011 drug bust in Chicago, began posing as a Silk Road member. He climbed the website’s ranks by taking over staff member accounts each time federal agents made an arrest or persuaded a suspect to cooperate with the investigat­ion.

The government presented numerous instant messages at Ulbricht’s trial between Der-Yeghiayan and Ulbricht.

While Ulbricht’s attorney has claimed his client quit the website once it was overrun by drug dealers, federal prosecutor­s have also charged Ulbricht with plotting the deaths of at least five people he saw as threats to Silk Road. Ulbricht is awaiting a murder-for-hire trial in Baltimore.

The Silk Road investigat­ion also led to criminal charges against two former federal agents who were involved in the probe.

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