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989 points heavyset_go | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.449s | source
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rich_sasha ◴[] No.45261966[source]
I certainly sympathise, but actually don't find it at all surprising.

Tor is totally used for criminal activity. That doesn't mean it is inherently a bad thing, or that it is this guy's fault, but he can't completely wash his hands off it. If bad guys use the postal service, it's not the postman's fault, but he has to cooperate with law enforcement if they demand that.

I don't know about the US, but contempt of court is a thing in the UK at least. You can't refuse to submit evidence to court, including things like encryption keys or things only stored in your head - or face penalties including unlimited jail time.

Now, I get that this is the US so the arrest was dialled up to 11 and it seems all of this is extra-judicial - no court warrant etc. This is all very disappointing. But, to my non-expert eye running a Tor exit node is in the legal grey zone, and I guess you can't be too surprised when things like this happen.

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jrecyclebin ◴[] No.45262087[source]
Idk the punishment just doesn't match the crime. Can't they just confiscate the computer? Or pressure the ISP to cancel his account? Tbh I get that the Feds are going route around and through anything that stands in their way.

Instead we're left up to state thuggery.

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1. ranger_danger ◴[] No.45262467[source]
Conveniently left out from the wife's story is the husband's corporate sabotage, FBI monitoring circumvention, CSAM searches and many parole violations.

3 years sounds about right to me.

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2. jrecyclebin ◴[] No.45285610[source]
Ok well - appreciate the further details.