Unfortunately, it looks like Ross is done.
Lawyers for Ross Ulbricht have spent the last two months shifting the focus from their client, charged with creating the billion-dollar drug market the Silk Road, and putting it onto the potential illegality of the FBI's investigation. Now the judge in that case has spoken, and it's clear she intends to put Ulbricht on trial, not the FBI.
In a 38-page ruling Friday, Judge Katherine Forrest dismissed the defense's motion to suppress evidence that hinged on the argument that law enforcement had violated Ulbricht's Fourth Amendment right to privacy from unreasonable searches. Just last week, Ulbricht's lawyers went so far as to contend that the FBI had illegally hacked a Silk Road server in Iceland without a warrant to determine its location.
But the Judge's rejection of that argument comes down to what may be seen as a fateful technicality: she argues that even if the FBI did hack the Silk Road server, Ulbricht hadn't sufficiently demonstrated that the server belonged to him, and thus can't claim that his privacy rights were violated by its search. "Defendant has...brought what he must certainly understand is a fatally deficient motion to suppress [evidence]," the judge writes. "He has failed to take the one step he needed to take to allow the Court to consider his substantive claims regarding the investigation: he has failed to submit anything establishing that he has a personal privacy interest in the Icelandic server or any of the other items imaged and/or searched and/or seized."
To be honest, I'd have been more surprised if she hadn't rejected it. I'm not American, but it seems to me when the feds want you, you're going down irrespective of guilt.
Ross was an idealist, he's going to spend the rest of his life paying for it. On a personal level, it makes me incredibly sad because, as an addict, Silk Road kept me safe. Addiction breeds desperation, and unfortunately when you're female not all dealers want money. I have yet to encounter a vendor on a DNM who wants anything other than bitcoin. But to talk about the harm reduction would mean accepting people are always going to use drugs, and so maybe DNM's aren't these evil places trying to corrupt the innocent minds of da kidz.
Poor Ross.