US Justice Department Indicts Creators of Bitcoin-Anonymizing ‘Samouri’ Wallet
They’re accused of “conspiracy to commit money laundering.” Why “conspiracy to commit” as opposed to just “money laundering”?
Because they didn’t hold anyone else’s money or do anything illegal with it. They provided a privacy tool that may have enabled other people to do illegal things with their bitcoin… What this tool does is offer what’s known as a “coinjoin,” a method for anonymizing bitcoin transactions by mixing them with other transactions, as the project’s founder, Keonne Rodriguez, explained to Reason in 2022: “I think the best analogy for it is like smelting gold,” he said. “You take your Bitcoin, you add it into [the conjoin protocol] Whirlpool, and Whirlpool smelts it into new pieces that are not associated to the original piece.”
Reason argues that providing the tool isn’t a crime, just like selling someone a kitchen knife isn’t a crime:
The government’s decision to indict Rodriguez and his partner William Lonergan Hill is also an attack on free speech because all they did was write open-source code and make it widely available. “It is an issue of a chilling effect on free speech,” attorney Jerry Brito, who heads up the cryptocurrency nonprofit Coin Center, told Reason after the U.S. Treasury went after the creators of another piece of anonymizing software…
The most important thing about bitcoin, and money like it, isn’t its price. It’s the check it places on the government’s ability to devalue, censor, and surviel our money. Creators of open-source tools like Samourai Wallet should be celebrated, not threatened with a quarter-century in a federal prison.
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