The Asian Age

Key player in Silk Road successor site gets eight years in US prison

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Seattle, June 6: A Washington state man was sentenced on Friday to eight years in prison for his role in helping the management of the successor website to Silk Road, an online black market where illegal drugs and other goods were sold. Brian Farrell, who prosecutor­s say was a staff member for Silk Road 2.0, was sentenced by U. S. District Judge Richard Jones in Seattle after pleading guilty in March to a charge of conspiracy to distribute heroin, cocaine and methamphet­amine.

Farrell, 27, was arrested in January 2015 as trial was under way in the case of Ross Ulbricht, the creator of the original Silk Road, which authoritie­s say Ulbricht ran under the alias “Dread Pirate Roberts.”

Ulbricht, 32, was sentenced in May 2015 to life in prison after a federal jury in Manhattan found him guilty on charges including distributi­ng narcotics. Silk Road 2.0 was launched late in 2013, weeks after authoritie­s had shuttered the original Silk Road website and arrested Ulbricht. Like the original website, Silk Road 2.0 allowed users to anonymousl­y buy and sell drugs, computer hacking tools and other illicit items, using the digital currency bitcoin, authoritie­s said. In November 2014, federal authoritie­s in Manhattan announced they had shut down Silk Road 2.0 and arrested its alleged operator, Blake Benthall, who prosecutor­s say operated the website under the name “Defcon.”

 ??  ?? The alleged homepage to Silk Road 2.0, the successor website to Silk Road, is seen in a screenshot labelled Exhibit A from a U. S. Department of Justice ( DOJ) criminal complaint filed against Blake Benthall
The alleged homepage to Silk Road 2.0, the successor website to Silk Road, is seen in a screenshot labelled Exhibit A from a U. S. Department of Justice ( DOJ) criminal complaint filed against Blake Benthall

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