In 2008, Ross Ulbricht was a libertarian with an altruistic attitude, who had a dream of getting rich on his way to doing something meaningful with his life.1 At first, this dream was in the form of a television series The Amazing Race; one summer away from college Ross would film auditions for the show with his sister.2 He marveled at the thought of making half a million dollars only because he did not know what his future had in store for him. But television was not in the cards for Ulbricht. Instead, he developed an idea, based on his belief that illicit drugs should not be illegal; he believed that if people were allowed to smoke, and thus harm themselves, they should be allowed to choose to put drugs into their bodies that could also potentially harm them.3 Ross himself was not a user of illegal drugs, but he believed that people had the right to use them if they pleased. This way of thinking led him to the idea of creating a place where people could to buy illegal substances without the government having any clue; this place was called The Silk Road. Ross did not know it yet, but he was on his way to creating a website that would allow people to buy and sell anything legal or illegal (in fact, mostly illegal) on a website without being traced. Customers would buy a product and it would arrive to them via the United States Postal Service, hidden behind an envelope or a box. Of course, the site had to be well hidden, so he turned to the place where the lines of morality are blurred and where laws are nonexistent, to the Dark Web. An online acquaintance by the name of Arto provided Ulbricht some insight. Arto showed Ulbricht that by using the web browser Tor any user who wished could slip through the nooks and crannies of the internet anonymously and untraceably.4
The Tor browser unveiled the means by which customers would reach Ross’s Amazon of drugs.5 But there was a problem; since the whole point of his website was for people to buy illegal drugs without being traced, how would his customers pay for their purchases? In 2011, there was no form of cash online for the internet, because the only way to make transactions was through credit or debit cards, which are extremely traceable. This was a huge concern for Ulbricht, until he read about something called Bitcoin. Bitcoin is a type of currency used online that could be traded for dollars much like trading cash for coins at an arcade. Anyone can buy bitcoins. One can buy bitcoins by using a credit or debit card, and then once one has bitcoins, one can use those bitcoins just like cash, online, just like dollars and cents, and not be traced.6
This amazing new process was exactly what Ross needed to complete what he started. Now that everything was coming together, Ulbricht still needed a startup item that he could sell. He began growing psychedelic mushrooms in a rundown apartment that only he knew about. After producing hundreds of pounds of this product, he was now ready to launch his site.7 Before the launch of his site, Ross needed a username that would separate him from his identity online. Without this separation, anyone would be able to know that Ross was connected to The Silk Road, particularly the police. So he came up with Dread Pirate Roberts (DPR), from the comical film, The Princess Bride. With that, he was now ready to be a player on The Dark Web.
This Dark Web is not the same internet that we use today on a day-to-day basis. These websites are so hidden from the public that someone must know exactly what they are looking for in order to find it, which was another obstacle that Ross was up against. He needed to bring would-be customers to his largely hidden website. So Ross would go to specific sites where people would blog about buying drugs online, and, under an anonymous name, he would bring up the existence of something called The Silk Road, and explain carefully how they could find it. This process was tedious, but people would eventually start making their way to his site. He began selling shrooms like crazy, and he was starting to make a large sum of money, when some other online drug dealers started to sell their products on his site as well. Anyone could create an account and sell what they wanted, much like Craigslist or Ebay, where people can post items to sell. Pretty soon The Silk Road was the premier place to shop for heroine, cocaine, weed, and more.8 Because Ross took a commission from each sale, he began making from tens of thousands to millions from his site.
The site was becoming so large that Ross could not control everything he was administrating. He needed to hire employees to help run the site and keep security at a maximum. One of those assistants he hired was a man named Curtis Green, who lived in Utah. Curtis had been helping Ross with the site, and one day he was arrested in a cocaine deal. This was very troubling to Ulbricht and he was considering what steps he had to take to ensure his safety when he noticed that he was missing upwards of three-hundred-thousand dollars. He believed that Curtis had been stealing his money. This was a big deal because, if Curtis was able to steal his money, then any experienced hacker out there had similar access to his money pile. Ulbricht had to make an example of Green, but how? In an online chat he had with a mentor, who was experienced in the drug market, Ross said, “I would have no problem wasting this guy.”9 In order to have a hit put on Curtis, Ross began speaking to a man under the username Nob online. Nob informed Ross that he knew a way to get to Green.
Agent Carl Force of the DEA had been tasked with investigating The Silk Road and to find the man behind it. Carl had been on the case for a while and managed to create an account on the site, in order to retrieve more information. The username he went under was Nob. He had recently been able to chat with the infamous Dread Pirate Roberts about a cocaine dealer he would recommend. DPR gave him the information of a dealer in Utah. The dealer was an employee of the website and was exactly the lead that Carl needed. Carl and a secret service agent who worked with the NSA, named Shaun Bridges, stalked Curtis Green’s house, waiting for evidence for them to go in. The package arrived and Curtis brought it into his house. As soon as he closed his garage door, Carl and his team headed to his house.10
Shaun Bridges, an experienced hacker, managed to log into The Silk Road posing as Curtis Green. Then Shaun proceeded to steal three-hundred-fifty thousand dollars from Dread Pirate Roberts, leading to Ross’s panic. As Nob, Carl spoke to DPR about having Curtis taken out, and it was in a hotel room where Green was staged to have been beaten and killed, Carl filming it all. Carl then sent their evidence to DPR, and Ross thought that that was the end of it, but this encounter was just the beginning of Ross’s problems.
Chris Tarbell was an FBI Special Agent working out of New York. He was part of the cybercrime team that led to the capture of many dark web criminals. He had just recently taken down the LulzSec hackers, who were responsible for many high profile attacks, such as the attacks on PayPal, Visa, and MasterCard.11 In a local bar that he and his team went to regularly, the bartender asked him what was next on the list, and sure enough, it was The Silk Road. For a long time, Tarbell had no idea how to crack The Silk Road, until some servers in Iceland, which were potentially connected to The Silk Road, were seized. After bickering with the Icelandic police to give them all the information they had, Chris received a grey thumb drive in the mail. On it were the potentially encrypted Silk Road servers. If the servers were encrypted, nothing could be done. Tarbell hoped and prayed that it wasn’t the case, as he was on his way to Thom Kiernan, a computer scientist co-worker. Thom worked hard to get as deep as he could into the folders, only to see many strings of random characters and numbers—they were indeed encrypted. This was the end, Chris thought, as he called and told his source from Iceland. Fortunately, his source had forgotten the key component to the lead: the passcode. Tarbell went back to Thom and asked him to insert the characters”trytocrackthisNSA.” This unlocked the final piece of the puzzle. Inside the servers were IP Addresses, potentially the one of Dread Pirate Roberts. An IP address is specific to a network router or computer, and it allows hackers to see a specific computer, and it is extremely traceable.
It was not long before Tarbell and his FBI team were able to see that Ross frequently visited a library in San Francisco to do work on the site. Ross had made an escape plan for Dominica in case he ever was in danger, but he was completely unaware on the afternoon of October 1, 2013 at the Glen Park Library. When arresting a hacker, the laptop must be opened and unlocked in order to have any evidence, because most hackers encrypt their computers, which even the FBI’s best supercomputers would take thousands of years to crack. Unfortunately for Ross, he was unable to close his laptop. The FBI found millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin on his laptop and even more at his apartment on two thumb drives. Due to the overwhelming evidence against Ulbricht, he was given two life sentences. Ross is currently in prison with no chance of parole.12
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 25. ↵
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 23. ↵
- Nick Bilton, “Brave New Underworld,” Vanity Fair Volume 59 (2017): 69. ↵
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 43. ↵
- Nick Bilton, “Brave New Underworld,” Vanity Fair Volume 59 (2017): 70. ↵
- John Pavlus, “The World Bitcoin Created,” Scientific American Volume 318 (2018): 32. ↵
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 45. ↵
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 56. ↵
- Nick Bilton, “Brave New Underworld,” Vanity Fair Volume 59 (2017): 72. ↵
- Nick Bilton, American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind behind the Silk Road (London: The Penguin Group, 2017), 185. ↵
- David Siegfried, “We Are Anonymous: Inside the Hacker World of LulzSec, Anonymous, and the Global Cyber Insurgency,” Booklist Volume 108 (2012): 19. ↵
- United States v. Ulbricht (United States Court of Appeals for Second Circuit 2017). ↵
87 comments
Sabrina Hsu
This article was very intriguing from the start all the way to the end. I really enjoyed reading and wondering what would happen next. I have never really read about any cases like this that involve the dark web, it was really interesting. I also thought the whole plan they set up was really cool because of how well they played it out. I’m surprised Ulbritcht didn’t catch on to it and figure it out. That part was definitely a plot twist and I really enjoyed it.
Michael Hinojosa
I had no idea who Ross was until I read this article, which in my opinion is kinda funny considering I’ve known about the dark web and its horrors for a long time now but the name Ross Ulbricht never really reached my ears. But regardless this article does a good job explaining how he ran his website and how his his love for money and his unquenchable greed was his ultimate downfall in the end.
Robert Freise
I have never heard of Ross Ulbricht until this article. The fact that he set up his on online currency and it had no restrictions. His overwhelming pursue for money ultimately led to his downfall. The risk of doing business on the dark web is very risky and the punishments are rough if you are doing illegal transactions on the internet. The fact that anything such as drugs and other illegal things could be purchased with the affiliation of bitcoin on the dark web is astonishing although very illegal.
Pedro Gonzalez Aboyte
The dark web has always been an interesting topic to me because it makes up most of the internet. The one we use on a daily basis is only a fraction of the complete internet. I have known about the Silk Road before but I never knew Ulbricht was the founder! It is incredible how a single person can create such a massive company like this. It was basically amazon but for everything illegal. I know that he ended up making an immense amount of money off of it but was it really worth it? The Silk Road has been taken down and he has been put in prison for the rest of his life. Doesn’t seem worth it to me.
Damian Jennings
I always thought I had a good foundation of what bitcoins were, I thought their soul purpose was to help fund online gamers who stream. Gamers can receive online payments through credit card use or through bitcoins, an online currency. I had no idea that bitcoins could be manipulated into aiding illegal purchases. It just goes to show how close minded I am, and how open minded other people are.
Damian Jennings
I had never known about Ross Ulbricht before perusing this article, however I observed his story to be very captivating. The way that he had fundamentally no restrictions when it came to his craving for cash is surely a theme that has been apart of our society, anyway Ulbricht’s story is certainly exceptional. Likewise, this article was additionally useful because of the way that it examined the inceptions of the underground market, which is exceptionally fascinating to me.
Alexandra Rodriguez
The dark web has always been interesting, however I don’t understand why people would go to such drastic measures to do illegal things. While Ulbritcht wasn’t a drug user, why did he feel the need to make it so drug users still had access to their merchandise? If he had stayed in his lane he would have avoided the whole scandal and it wouldn’t have affected his life. Even though he made lots of money from it through bitcoin, was it ultimately worth the risk? I don’t think so.
Janelle Larios
The article is very interesting and I am glad that I came across. I recently watched a movie that involved the dark web as the setting and theme. I’ve known of it but I never realized how expansive and how destructive it could be. I wouldn’t say I was amazed at his efforts into creating something like this, but it did take time and patience to actually get people to join, buy and sell. I also found it funny that Ross’ trusted mentor was apart of law enforcement. I think that’s something that you see out of a movie.
Martina Rodriguez
The author does a good job of setting up the logic that Ulbricht follows. Had never heard of the website ‘Tor’, nor did I know even such a thing existed. There seemed to be a lot of issues with the underground drug business he was trying to run that I’m impressed he solved so well (aka Bitcoin). How he made so much money from just creating as website was pretty incredible (even if it was through illegal means). The author did a very good job of explaining the chain of events that transpired, especially the climax of the un closed laptop.
Tessa Bodukoglu
I really enjoyed reading this article. from watching tv shows and always reading and hearing about the dark web to this article. I find it very interesting with the whole concept of the dark web. the fact that everything is basically untraceable, and anonymous. no one knows anyone’s true identity. the true beauty of the dark web. now looking at it in a general aspect of sex trafficking and drugs and weaponry, is not a very good thing and I personally don’t stand for that, but the idea is very genius.