American kingpin The epic hunt for the criminal mastermind behind the Silk Road

Nick Bilton

Book - 2017

From New York Times-bestselling author Nick Bilton comes a true-life thriller about the rise and fall of Ross Ulbricht, aka the Dread Pirate Roberts, the founder of the online black market Silk Road.

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Subjects
Genres
True crime stories
Published
New York : Portfolio/Penguin [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Nick Bilton (author)
Physical Description
xv, 329 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 329).
ISBN
9781591848141
  • Author's Note
  • Cast of Characters
  • Part I.
  • 1. The Pink Pill
  • 2. Ross Ulbricht
  • 3. Julia Vie
  • 4. The Debate
  • 5. Jared's Khat
  • 6. The Bonfire
  • 7. The Silk Road
  • 8. Ross the Farmer
  • 9. Opening Day of the Silk Road
  • 10. What Goes Up Must Come Down
  • 11. The Gawker Article
  • 12. A Bull's-eye on My Back
  • 13. Julia Tells Erica
  • 14. What Have You Done?!
  • 15. Jared and the Fifty-Ton Flamingo
  • 16. From Austin to Australia
  • Part II.
  • 17. Carl Force's Tomorrow
  • 18. Variety Jones and the Serpent
  • 19. Jared Goes Shopping
  • 20. The Dread Pirate Roberts
  • 21. Carl Force Is Born Again
  • 22. "O Captain, My Captain"
  • 23. Ross, Hanged or Home
  • 24. Carl, Eladio, and Nob
  • 25. Jared's Chicago Versus Carl's Baltimore
  • 26. The Mutiny
  • 27. A Billion Dollars?!
  • 28. The Aspiring Billionaire in Costa Rica
  • 29. Variety Jones Goes to Scotland
  • 30. The Armory Opens
  • 31. Ross Silences Julia
  • Part III.
  • 32. Chris Tarhell, FBI
  • 33. Ross Arrives in San Francisco
  • 34. Chris in the Pit
  • 35. Batten Down the Hatches!
  • 36. Jared's Dead Ends
  • 37. A Pirate in Dominica
  • 38. Carl Likes DPR
  • 39. Kidney for Sale!
  • 40. The White House in Utah
  • 41. Curtis Is Tortured
  • 42. The First Murder
  • 43. The FBI Joins the Hunt
  • 44. Camping and the Ball
  • Part IV.
  • 45. Gary Alford, IRS
  • 46. Life and Death on the Road
  • 47. Gary's Big Change
  • 48. Ross Goes Underground
  • 49. Carl Switches Teams
  • 50. A Parking Ticket on the Internet
  • 51. Tarbell Finds a Mistake
  • 52. The Fake IDs, Part One
  • 53. The Deconfliction Meeting
  • 54. Jared Becomes Cirrus
  • 55. Julia Is Saved! Hallelujah!
  • 56. The Fake IDs, Part Two
  • 57. Onward to Federal Plaza
  • 58. Julia Comes to San Francisco
  • 59. I Am God
  • 60. The Phone Call
  • 61. The Good-bye Party
  • Part V.
  • 62. The Pink Sunset
  • 63. Carla Sophia
  • 64. FeLiNa
  • 65. Arrested
  • 66. The Laptop
  • 67. Ross Locked Up
  • 68. United States of America v. Ross William Ulbricht
  • 69. To Catch a Pirate
  • 70. Sentencing
  • 71. The Plural of Mongoose
  • 72. The Museum
  • 73. The Others
  • Notes on Reporting
  • Acknowledgments
  • Bibliography
Review by New York Times Review

WHEN ROSS ULBRICHT created the Silk Road, a clandestine online drug bazaar hidden on the deep web, he was a 26-year-old libertarian idealist living in Austin, Tex., talking his girlfriend's ear off about Austrian economics and seasteading experiments - the idea of creating communities in the middle of the sea, free from government regulations. For all his lofty ambitions, he felt like a failure. He had flunked his Ph.D. exam and was unable to find a buyer for his seasteading gaming simulation. But with the Silk Road he was able to marry his business ambitions and anti-authoritarian philosophy; he envisioned it as a powerful way to defy what he perceived to be the state's irrational drug policies. Using an anonymizing browser like Tor and the cryptocurrency Bitcoin, people could discreetly buy and sell drugs. Ulbricht taught himself to code and he began by selling mushrooms that he grew himself. By the time Ulbricht was arrested two years later, the Silk Road was an estimated $1.2 billion business that expanded into heroin, guns, hacking tools, counterfeit cash and cyanide. Ulbricht, a former Boy Scout, had tried to commission five murders as the Dread Pirate Roberts, the pseudonym under which he ruled the site. The obsessive, dizzying manhunt to apprehend him involved a slew of government agencies and ended with a neck-breaking plot twist: double agents and hundreds of thousands of dollars in missing Bitcoin. Ulbricht is currently appealing a life sentence for seven convictions, including narcotics, money laundering and the kingpin statute, more typically applied to Mafia bosses or cartel leaders. Evidence unearthed by federal agents included his journal, along with nearly two million words of chat logs between Dread Pirate Roberts and his underlings detailing the operations of the site. The weird details of the Silk Road bust and the contrast of the drugs and violence with Ulbricht's wholesome past and Grated vocabulary (his preferred expletives include "heck" and "fudge") have proved irresistible to storytellers. The hit man for the first murder that Ulbricht allegedly commissioned was an undercover D.E.A. agent. Ulbricht's target, a Mormon 47year-old grandfather in Utah, had to fake his death by pouring a can of Campbell's Tomato Soup on his face to look like blood. Is it any wonder that the Coen brothers are reportedly working on a screenplay? There have already been two short documentaries about Silk Road, one by Vice and one by Alex Winters (Bill of "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure"), as well as a series in Wired. Curtis Green, the Campbell's Soup victim, is writing a memoir. The double agent has hinted at a movie deal as well. But "American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road," the second book from the journalist Nick Bilton, a former technology columnist at The Times, is the most comprehensive narrative thus far. The cast of characters has been established over the years since Ulbricht's arrest, but Bilton's impressive reporting gives more space to a story that could use some sprawl. For instance, close observers may remember Gary Alford, the criminal investigator with the I.R.S., who was the first agent to come across Ulbricht's name in conjunction with the Silk Road. Previous accounts gave us the logistics, but Bilton's book gives us psychological shading and insight into Alford's method. Alford was born in Brooklyn in 1977, the summer the Son of Sam terrorized New York. It stuck with him that the N.Y.P.D. finally caught the serial killer by poring over parking tickets. He had a hunch he could ensnare Dread Pirate Roberts the same way, and began to look for a sloppy mistake. Sure enough, he discovered that Ulbricht left an anonymous comment on a forum called the Shroomery when he was trying to drum up attention for his new site. However, he had neglected to scrub his email address. In Bilton's account an unexpected symmetry emerges between the agents investigating Ulbricht and the kingpin himself. They're all fighting feelings of inferiority and treating the Silk Road as a chance to prove themselves. Bilton's focus is on the hunt, and the book seems determined to sustain the suspense, even when it's baked into the plot. Many chapters end with a Cliffhanger, which adds a cinematic quality but veers into pulpy true crime when it feels like there's more pathos at stake. Sometimes the facts are more satisfying than the framing. Bilton's first book, "Hatching Twitter," dug into the founding of the social media company. In "American Kingpin," he ratchets up the tech industry parallels with good reason, but it can feel overdetermined. Ulbricht fits the archetype of the eccentric tech wizard, including pushing his body to extremes for intellectual purposes, like choosing to take cold showers for a month to test his resilience. But part of what makes this particular kingpin so fascinating is that Silk Road wasn't incubated in Mountain View, Menlo Park or the antiseptic co-working spaces of San Francisco. Ulbricht accomplished "the equivalent of building eBay and Amazon on his own, without any help or any knowledge," Bilton writes. Toiling away in a cramped bedroom in Austin, making millions without getting the cover of Forbes, he seemed driven by his outsider status. ULBRICHT'S RISE AND FALL is like the startup hero's journey reflected in a black mirror. He was fond of the same Ayn Rand quotes as other founders: "The question isn't who is going to let me; it's who is going to stop me." He had his own version of a consigliere, in the form of Variety Jones. (Ulbricht's ex-girlfriend gets a lot of space, but the most tender and complex relationship of the book is between him and Variety Jones.) Ulbricht also had the same blinkered view of the consequences of his actions. However, unlike the moral transgressions of the Uber C.E.O. Travis Kalanick or the Theranos C.E.O. Elizabeth Holmes, his came with chat logs. The documentation offers a small window into one of late capitalism's best kept secrets: How these messianic entrepreneurs talk behind closed doors when they fall so far from their ideals. I wish there had been more focus on that rather than scenes inside a Samsung factory or yet another of Ulbricht's beach vacations. Since the arrest, Ulbricht's situation seems decidedly less fringe. Libertarianism has rolled up into the Republican mainstream. The rhetoric that inspired him, from books by Murray Rothbard and Ludwig von Mises, has found its way into the Republican Party. Gawker, the site responsible for first reporting on Silk Road, is dead, bankrupted by Peter Thiel, the libertarian billionaire venture capitalist, Trump adviser and Facebook board member. Like some other start-up founders, Ulbricht is undone by his naiveté and narcissism. "I remember clearly why I created the Silk Road," he said at sentencing. "I wanted to empower people to be able to make choices in their lives, for themselves and to have privacy and anonymity." The judge responded: "No drug dealer from the Bronx selling meth or heroin or crack has ever made these kinds of arguments to the court. It is a privileged argument. You are no better a person than any other drug dealer.... You were captain of the ship, as the Dread Pirate Roberts, and you made your own laws and you enforced those laws in the manner that you saw fit." As she handed down the sentence, she said: "It was, in fact, a carefully planned life's work. It was your opus. You wanted it to be your legacy - and it is." Ulbricht accomplished 'the equivalent of building eBay and Amazon on his own, without any help or any knowledge.' NITASHA TIKU is a senior writer for Wired covering Silicon Valley.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [June 25, 2017]
Review by Library Journal Review

Bilton (special correspondent, Vanity Fair; Hatching Twitter) has written the first and definitive account of the Dark Web drug bazaar known as the Silk Road. Thanks to his access to trial transcripts, web postings of Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht, and interviews with government players and friends of Ulbricht, this book brims with fascinating detail. It alternates between accounts of baffled federal agents trying to identify the ghostly "Dread Pirate Roberts," Ulbricht's online persona, and his Libertarian upbringing and actions. Bilton excels in showing how Ulbricht, otherwise undistinguished professionally, recognized that warring government agencies, including corrupt agents, were unable to police the anonymous reaches of the Internet. Hiring worldwide help to run a marketplace in drugs, guns, and human organs, Ulbricht could demonstrate his superiority, change society, and get rich in Bitcoin. This deeply researched book is a pleasure to read and a nightmare foretold for law enforcement. VERDICT Highly recommended for true crime and technology fans.-Harry Charles, St. Louis © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Engrossing account of the rise and fall of Ross Ulbricht, founder of the now-shuttered online drug bazaar the Silk Road.Vanity Fair special correspondent Bilton (Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal, 2013, etc.) ties his interest in technology to a gritty pursuit tale of the drug underground as it migrated to cyberspace. As the author writes, the Silk Road "could be living proof, Ross fantasized, that legalizing drugs was the best way to stop violence and oppression in the world." Seemingly another bright, restless millennial, Ulbricht enacted his libertarian beliefs by founding a drug marketplace intended to make purchasing safer and undermine the drug war. Utilizing the "Dark Web" technologies of TOR and bitcoin, Ulbricht's site opened in 2011 and immediately thrived: "Hundreds of people were now selling drugs on the site, and thousands were buying." An outlaw subculture quickly developed, drawing in dealers, acolytes, hackers, and scammers; Ulbricht encouraged the notoriety, developing a menacing alter ego, the "Dread Pirate Roberts." However, he overestimated his ability to avoid law enforcement scrutiny, beginning with low-level mail inspectors suddenly finding numerous identical envelopes of Ecstasy: "Ross had picked a fight with the biggest bully on earth, and the bully was about to punch back." Chapters generally alternate between Ulbricht's efforts to stabilize the website while covering his tracks with a self-consciously romantic fugitive lifestyle and the increasingly frantic investigation, which involved competing teams from different agencies (a few of whose members were later convicted of siphoning Ulbricht's bitcoins and other malfeasance). Ultimately, the Silk Road spun out of Ulbricht's control, to the point that he was soliciting murders for hire and allowing disguised federal agents to infiltrate the site's administration. Dramatically arrested by the FBI in a San Francisco library in 2013, he received a life sentence. Bilton writes in a breezy, colloquial style, punctuated by occasional pulpy asides, and he aptly manages the technological arcana of this sprawling story. A fast-paced, readable true-crime tale that frames the likely future of the underground economy. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 The Pink Pill Pink. A tiny pink pill with an etching of a squirrel on either side. Jared Der-Yeghiayan couldn't take his eyes off it. He stood in a windowless mail room, the Department of Homeland Security badge hanging from his neck illuminated by pulsing halogen lights above. Every thirty seconds, the sound of airplanes rumbled through the air outside. Jared looked like an adolescent with his oversize clothes, buzz cut, and guileless hazel eyes. "We've started to get a couple of them a week," his colleague Mike, a burly Customs and Border Protection officer, said as he handed Jared the envelope that the pill had arrived in. The envelope was white and square, with a single perforated stamp affixed to the top right corner. heir offen, read the inside flap. Below those two words was the English translation, open here. The recipient's name, typed in black, read david. The package was on its way to a house on West Newport Avenue in Chicago. It was exactly what Jared had been waiting for since June. The plane carrying the envelope, KLM flight 611, had landed at Chicago O'Hare International Airport a few hours earlier after a four-thousand-mile journey from the Netherlands. As weary passengers stood up and stretched their arms and legs, baggage handlers twenty feet below them unloaded cargo from the belly of the Boeing 747. Suitcases of all shapes and sizes were ushered in one direction; forty or so blue buckets filled with international mail were sent in another. Those blue tubs-nicknamed "scrubs" by airport employees-were driven across the tarmac to a prodigious mail storage and sorting facility fifteen minutes away. Their contents-letters to loved ones, business documents, and that white square envelope containing the peculiar pink pill-would pass through that building, past customs, and into the vast logistical arteries of the United States Postal Service. If everything went according to plan, as it did most of the time, that small envelope of drugs, and many like it, would just slip by unnoticed. But not today. Not on October 5, 2011. By late afternoon, Mike Weinthaler, a Customs and Border Protection officer, had begun his daily ritual of clocking in for work, pouring an atrocious cup of coffee, and popping open the blue scrubs to look for anything out of the ordinary: a package with a small bulge; return addresses that looked fake; the sound of plastic wrap inside a paper envelope; anything fishy at all. There was nothing scientific about it. There were no high-tech scanners or swabs testing for residue. After a decade in which e-mail had largely outmoded physical mail, the postal service's budgets had been decimated. Fancy technology was a rare treat allocated to the investigation of large packages. And Chicago's mail-sniffing dogs-Shadow and Rogue-came through only a couple of times a month. Instead, whoever was hunting through the scrubs simply reached a hand inside and followed their instincts. Thirty minutes into his rummaging routine, the white square envelope caught Mike's eye. He held it up to the lights overhead. The address on the front had been typed, not written by hand. That was generally a telltale sign for customs agents that something was amiss. As Mike knew, addresses are usually typed only for business mail, not personal. The package also had a slight bump, which was suspicious, considering it came from the Netherlands. Mike grabbed an evidence folder and a 6051S seizure form that would allow him to legally open the envelope. Placing a knife in its belly, he gutted it like a fish, dumping out a plastic baggie with a tiny pink pill of ecstasy inside. Mike had been working in the customs unit for two years and was fully aware that under normal circumstances no one in the federal government would give a flying fuck about one lousy pill. There was, as every government employee in Chicago knew, an unspoken rule that drug agents didn't take on cases that involved fewer than a thousand pills. The U.S. Attorney's Office would scoff at such an investigation. There were bigger busts to pursue. But Mike had been given clear instructions by someone who was waiting for a pill just like this: Homeland Security agent Jared Der-Yeghiayan. A few months prior, Mike had come across a similar piece of illicit mail on its way to Minneapolis. He had picked up the phone and called the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Homeland Security Investigations office at the airport, half expecting that he would be laughed at or hung up on, as usual. But the HSI agent who answered was surprisingly receptive. At the time, Jared had been on the job for only two months and frankly didn't know any better. "I can't fly to Minneapolis to talk to a guy about one single pill," Jared said. "So call me if you get something in my area, in Chicago. Then I can go over there and do a knock-and-talk." Four months later, when Mike found a pill destined for Chicago, Jared rushed over to see it. "Why do you want this?" Mike asked Jared. "All the other agents say no; people have been saying no to meth and heroin for years. And yet you want this one little pill?" Jared knew very well that this could be nothing. Maybe an idiot kid in the Netherlands was sending a few friends some MDMA. But he also wondered why one single pill had been sent on such a long journey and how the people who mailed such small packages of drugs knew the recipients they were sending them to. Something about it felt peculiar. "There may be something else to this," Jared told Mike as he took the envelope. He would need it to show his "babysitter." Every newbie agent in HSI was assigned one-a training officer-during their first year. A more seasoned officer who knew the drill, made sure you didn't get into too much trouble, and often made you feel like a total piece of shit. Every morning Jared had to call his chaperone and tell him what he was working on that day. The only thing that made it different from preschool was that you got to carry a gun. Unsurprisingly, Jared's training officer saw no urgency to a single pill, and it was a week before he even consented to accompany his younger colleague on the "knock-and-talk"-to knock on the door of the person who was supposed to receive the pill and, hopefully, talk with them. That day, as Jared's government-issued Crown Victoria zigzagged through the North Side of Chicago, the small Rubik's Cube that hung from his key chain swung back and forth in the opposite direction. His car radio was dialed into sports: the Cubs and White Sox had been eliminated from contention, but the Bears were preparing for an in-division contest against the Lions. Amid the crackle of the radio, he turned onto West Newport Avenue, a long row of two-story limestone buildings split into a dyad of top- and bottom-floor apartments. Jared knew this working-class neighborhood well. He'd followed the baseball games at nearby Wrigley Field when he was a kid. But now this was Hipsterville, full of fancy coffee shops, chic restaurants, and, as Jared was now learning, people who had drugs mailed to their houses from the Netherlands. He was fully aware how ridiculous he might look in the eyes of his grizzled training officer. They were in one of the city's safest precincts to question someone about a single pill of ecstasy. But Jared didn't care what his supervisor thought; he had a hunch that this was bigger than one little pill. He just didn't know how big-yet. He found the address and pulled over, his chaperone close behind. They wandered up the steps and Jared tapped on the glass door of apartment number 1. This was the easy part, knocking. Getting someone to talk would be a whole different challenge. The recipient of the envelope could easily deny that the package was his. Then it was game over. After twenty seconds the door lock clicked open and a young, skinny man dressed in jeans and a T-shirt peered outside. Jared flashed his badge, introduced himself as an HSI agent, and asked if David, the man whose name was typed on the white envelope, was home. "He's at work right now," the young man replied, opening the door further. "But I'm his roommate." "Can we come inside?" Jared asked. "We'd just like to ask you a few questions." The roommate obliged, stepping to the side as they walked toward the kitchen. As Jared took a seat he pulled out a pen and notepad and asked, "Does your roommate get a lot of packages in the mail?" "Yeah, from time to time." "Well," Jared said as he glanced at his training officer, who sat silently in the corner with his arms crossed, "we found this package that was addressed to him and it had some drugs inside." "Yeah, I know about that," the roommate replied nonchalantly. Jared was taken aback by how casually the young man admitted to receiving drugs in the mail, but he continued with the questions, asking where they got these drugs from. "From a Web site." "What's the Web site?" "The Silk Road," the roommate said. Jared stared back, confused. The Silk Road? He had never heard of it before. In fact, Jared had never heard of any Web site where you could buy drugs online, and he wondered if he was just being a clueless newbie, or if this was how you bought drugs in Hipsterville these days. "What's the Silk Road?" Jared asked, trying not to sound too oblivious but sounding completely oblivious. And with the velocity of those descending airliners at O'Hare, the skinny roommate began a fast-paced explanation of the Silk Road Web site. "You can buy any drug imaginable on the site," he said, some of which he had tried with his roommate-including marijuana, meth, and the little pink ecstasy pills that had been arriving, week after week, on KLM flight 611. As Jared scribbled in his notepad, the roommate continued to talk at a swift clip. You paid for the drugs with this online digital currency called Bitcoin, and you shopped using an anonymous Web browser called Tor. Anyone could go onto the Silk Road Web site, select from the hundreds of different kinds of drugs they offered and pay for them, and a few days later the United States Postal Service would drop them into your mailbox. Then you sniffed, inhaled, swallowed, drank, or injected whatever came your way. "It's like Amazon.com," the roommate said, "but for drugs." Jared was amazed and slightly skeptical that this virtual marketplace existed in the darkest recesses of the Web. It will be shut down within a week, he thought. After a few more questions, he thanked the roommate for his time and left with his colleague, who hadn't said a word. "Have you ever heard of this Silk Road?" Jared asked his training officer as they walked back to their respective cruisers. "Oh yeah," he replied dispassionately. "Everyone's heard of Silk Road. There must be hundreds of open cases on it." Jared, somewhat embarrassed at having admitted he knew nothing about it, wasn't deterred. "I'm going to look into it anyway and see what I can find out," he said. The older man shrugged and drove off. An hour later Jared bounded into his windowless office, where he waited for what seemed an eternity for his archaic Dell government computer to load up. He began searching the Department of Homeland Security database for open investigations on the Silk Road. But to his surprise, there were no results. He tried other key words and variations on the spelling of the site. Nothing. What about a different input box? Still nothing. He was confused. There were not "hundreds of open cases" on the Silk Road, as his training officer had claimed. There were none. Jared thought for a moment and then decided to go to the next-best technology that any seasoned government official uses to search for something important: Google. The first few results were historical Web sites referencing the ancient trade route between China and the Mediterranean. But halfway down the page he saw a link to an article from early June of that year on Gawker, a news and gossip blog, proclaiming that the Silk Road was "the underground website where you can buy any drug imaginable." The blog post showed screenshots of a Web page with a green camel logo in the corner. It also displayed pictures of a cornucopia of drugs, 340 "items" in all, including Afghan hash, Sour 13 weed, LSD, ecstasy, eight-balls of cocaine, and black tar heroin. Sellers were located all over the world; buyers too. You've got to be fucking kidding me, Jared thought. It's this easy to buy drugs online? He then spent the entire rest of the day, and most of the evening, reading anything he could about the Silk Road. Over the weekend, as he drove between antique fairs (his weekly ritual) near Chicago with his wife and young son, he was almost catatonically consumed with the drug Web site. Jared realized that if anyone could buy drugs on the Silk Road, anyone would: from middle-aged yuppies who lived on the North Side of Chicago to young kids growing up in the heartland. And if drugs were being sold on the site now, why not other contraband next? Maybe it would be guns, bombs, or poisons. Maybe, he imagined, terrorists could use it to create another 9/11. As he looked at his sleeping son in the rearview mirror, these thoughts petrified him. But where do you even start on the Internet, in a world of complete anonymity? Finally, as the weekend came to a close, Jared started to formulate an idea for how he could approach the case. He knew it would be laborious and tedious, but there was a chance that it could also eventually lead him to the creator of the Silk Road Web site. But finding the drugs and the drug dealers, and even the founder of the Silk Road, would be easy compared with the challenge of persuading his supervisor to let him work this case based on a single tiny pink pill. Even if he could convince his boss, Jared would also have to cajole the U.S. Attorney's Office into supporting him in this pursuit. And there wasn't a U.S. attorney in all of America who would take on a case that involved one measly pill of anything. Exacerbating all of this was the fact that thirty-year-old Jared was as green as they came. And no one ever-ever!-took a newbie seriously. He would need a way to convince them all that this was bigger than a single pink pill. By Monday morning he had come up with a scheme that he hoped his boss would not be able to ignore. He took a deep breath, walked into his supervisor's office, and sat down. "You got a minute?" he said as he threw the white envelope on the desk. "I have something important I need to show you." Excerpted from American Kingpin: The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road by Nick Bilton All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.