Antivirus creator Mcafee found dead in Spanish prison
John Mcafee, the creator of the eponymous antivirus software, was found dead Wednesday in prison outside Barcelona. He was 75.
Over the past decade, Mcafee gained notoriety for his ranting on social media, his involvement in a Central American criminal investigation and accusations from US authorities that he was involved with pumping and dumping cryptocurrencies.
Mcafee was discovered dead in his prison cell hours after Spain’s National Court approved his extradition to the US over multiple tax fraud charges. He was found by security personnel at the Brians 2 prison in northeast Spain, according to a spokesperson of the Supreme Court of Catalonia.
Spanish newspaper La Vanguardia reported that Mcafee appeared to have died by suicide, citing a statement from the regional Department of Justice of Catalonia, where he was being held. Mcafee had been in Spanish custody since October on a June 2020 US indictment in which he was charged with failing to file four years of tax returns while concealing assets.
Then in March, he was indicted and accused of fraud and money laundering over his use of social media to promote cryptocurrencies, which prosecutors said generated $13 million in illicit gains for Mcafee and a co-conspirator.
Nishay Sanan, Mcafee’s attorney, said his colleagues in Spain confirmed that Mcafee had been found dead in his jail cell. Sanan claimed the US government had identified Mcafee as a target and “tried to erase him, but failed.”
“John lived his life the way he saw fit,” Sanan said. “In the end that is all that matters. You don’t have to agree with his way — he did not care.”
The Justice Department declined to comment and a spokeswoman referred questions to Spanish authorities. Before his legal turmoil, Mcafee was a pioneer of the cybersecurity industry. He founded Mcafee Corp in 1987 in Santa Clara, California, and led the company as it dominated the market for antivirus protection of personal computers. Mcafee resigned in 1994. Intel bought the company in 2010 and later rebranded all Mcafee products as Intel Security.
Mcafee relocated to Belize in 2008 after his $100 million fortune was reduced to $4 million following a series of failed investments in property, real estate and bonds. There he had one of his biggest conflicts with authorities in 2012 after the killing of a neighbour, Gregory Faull, a 52-year-old contractor and Florida native.
During the period from 2014 to 2018 Mcafee failed to file US tax returns, according to a federal indictment. After eluding law enforcement, he was arrested and detained last October in Spain. From prison, Mcafee was able to use Twitter to continue promoting cryptocurrencies, but also to share his experience.
In April, he tweeted: “this has been the most trying period in my life.” At that point, he had been in the Catalonian prison for six months.
In November 2019, Mcafee took to Twitter to show off his latest tattoo on his right bicep. It read, “$WHACKD.” In a related tweet, he wrote: “Getting subtle messages from US officials saying, in effect: ‘We’re coming for you Mcafee! We’re going to kill yourself. I got a tattoo today just in case. If I suicide myself, I didn’t. I was whackd. Check my right arm.” “Sometimes genius and madness aren’t far apart and it seems he unfortunately fell prey to his demons,” said Doug Clinton, managing partner at Loup Ventures.