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989 points heavyset_go | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.255s | source
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tptacek ◴[] No.45261951[source]
For whatever it's worth, the Reddit story here says that the federal courts used "fraudulent warrants to jail my husband again". Maybe! The other side of that story, via PACER, is a detailed parole violation warrant (you can hear the marshal refer to it in the video); the violations in that warrant:

1. Admitting to using cannabis during supervised release

2. Failing to make scheduled restitution payments and to cooperate with the financial investigation that sets restitution payment amounts.

3. Falling out of contact with his probation officer, who attempted home visits to find him.

4. Opening several new lines of credit.

5. Using an unauthorized iPhone (all his Internet devices apparently have keyloggers as a condition of his release).

These read like kind of standard parole terms? I don't know what the hell happened to get him into this situation in the first place, though.

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shagie ◴[] No.45262691[source]
From reddit post, from transcript at https://rockenhaus.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/U.S.-v.-Ro...

     8 Q. Due to the nature of the offense charged being a
     9 computer-related crime, did he have specific
    10 restrictions on his pretrial release as it relates to
    11 his computer usage?
    12 A. Yes. One of the conditions was that he must
    13 participate in the Computer Restriction and Monitoring
    14 Program.
    15 Q. How is that program enforced?
    16 A. That program is enforced -- the defendant has to
    17 download a software program onto his computer or iPhone
    18 or whatever, any type of device that has access to the
    19 Internet. That information is -- the monitoring
    20 company, they monitor -- they are able to monitor what
    21 he is accessing on the Internet. And the Probation
    22 Officer has been allowed to review weekly reports about
    23 what sites he's accessing, things like that.
    24 Q. And is the defendant notified and made aware and
    25 provided with a document that states the terms of that
     1 agreement?
     2 A. Yes.
The use of an encrypted Tor node would likely be a violation of that restriction regardless of what is being accessed.

The chain would then appear to be: convicted of computer crime -> required computer monitoring software during supervision -> installed and used Tor -> supervision violation and revoked to prison.

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tptacek ◴[] No.45262895[source]
As I understand it --- I haven't read deeply enough to confirm this, it's what I've pieced together from the Reddit thing --- the Tor stuff came long before any of this. What I gather is:

1. Back in 2014 this person committed a pretty grave computer offense, which was not at the time prosecuted.

2. Some time after that, he became a high-profile Tor relay operator.

3. Some time after that, he was asked to subvert those Tor relays by the DOJ.

4. In 2019 he was prosecuted for the computer offenses, and convicted.

5. In 2021, he was released on parole.

(I think there's a long string of parole issues after that, and then)

6. In 2025 he was accused by the probation office of violating his parole in a bunch of ways and taken into custody.

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gtowey ◴[] No.45266436[source]
If this is true then it sounds like the FBI targeted him specifically because they figured his previous crimes made for good leverage.

It seems his mistake was not realizing that he was caught between a rock and a hard place. More colloquially he's in the FO stage after FA.

It doesn't seem like anyone is morally in the right, but it also seems like the defendant here was in a legal grey area to begin with.

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1. __turbobrew__ ◴[] No.45266993[source]
I don’t think willingly destroying your former employers property is a grey area. It is pretty cut and dry it is a crime. The feds used this as a wedge to get him out of the TOR game.