World

Silk Road operator Ross William Ulbricht faces murder-for-hire trial

Murder-for-hire allegations are central to a New York trial starting this week for a man charged with running an online black market where drugs were sold as easily as books.

Ulbricht asked others to kill those competing with his online drug bazaar, authorities say

An artist rendering showing Ross William Ulbricht during a court appearance.
An artist rendering showing Ross William Ulbricht during an appearance at Federal Court in San Francisco in October. Authorities in New York say Ulbricht sought others to kill those competing with his Silk Road drug website. (Vicki Behringer/The Associated Press)

Murder-for-hire allegations are central to a New York trial starting this week for a San Francisco man charged with running an online black market where drugs were sold as easily as books and electronics.

U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest concluded prosecutors could introduce evidence about six murder plots into Ross William Ulbricht's trial. Formal jury selection starts Tuesday.

Prosecutors say Ulbricht ran an underground website known as Silk Road, where hundreds of kilograms of cocaine, heroin and other drugs were sold to more than 100,000 customers. Ulbricht has pleaded not guilty.

The government maintains Ulbricht attempted to protect his operation by asking others to kill those who posed a threat to his business.

"The charges in this case are extremely serious: Ulbricht is charged not with participating in a run-of-the-mill drug distribution conspiracy, but with designing and operating an online criminal enterprise of enormous scope, worldwide reach, and capacity to generate tens of millions of dollars in commissions," the judge has written. "Evidence that defendant sought to protect this sprawling enterprise by soliciting murders-for-hire is, in this overall context, not unduly prejudicial."

Arrested in San Francisco

Ulbricht was arrested Oct. 1, 2013, at a San Francisco library, where he was swarmed by FBI agents who seized his computer.

The government says he started Silk Road in early 2011, saying he wanted to "create a website where people could buy anything anonymously, with no trail whatsoever that could lead back to them." It said a spreadsheet found on his computer listed "sr inc" as an asset worth $104 million.

He was charged in Manhattan with conspiring to commit narcotics trafficking, conspiring to commit computer hacking and conspiring to commit money laundering for a scheme that the government said stretched from January 2011 through September 2013. He is also charged in federal court in Baltimore.

If convicted in both cases, he could face up to life in prison.