👀 家人們,每天看行情、刷大佬觀點,卻從來不開口說兩句?你的觀點可能比你想的更有價值!
廣場新人 & 回歸福利正式上線!不管你是第一次發帖還是久違回歸,我們都直接送你獎勵!🎁
每月 $20,000 獎金等你來領!
📅 活動時間: 長期有效(月底結算)
💎 參與方式:
用戶需爲首次發帖的新用戶或一個月未發帖的回歸用戶。
發帖時必須帶上話題標籤: #我在广场发首帖 。
內容不限:幣圈新聞、行情分析、曬單吐槽、幣種推薦皆可。
💰 獎勵機制:
必得獎:發帖體驗券
每位有效發帖用戶都可獲得 $50 倉位體驗券。(注:每月獎池上限 $20,000,先到先得!如果大家太熱情,我們會繼續加碼!)
進階獎:發帖雙王爭霸
月度發帖王: 當月發帖數量最多的用戶,額外獎勵 50U。
月度互動王: 當月帖子互動量(點讚+評論+轉發+分享)最高的用戶,額外獎勵 50U。
📝 發帖要求:
帖子字數需 大於30字,拒絕純表情或無意義字符。
內容需積極健康,符合社區規範,嚴禁廣告引流及違規內容。
💡 你的觀點可能會啓發無數人,你的第一次分享也許就是成爲“廣場大V”的起點,現在就開始廣場創作之旅吧!
How The Police Apprehended Silk Road_s 50,000 Bitcoin Thief
Two years after James Zhong was apprehended for stealing 50,000 bitcoins (BTC) from the dark web marketplace Silk Road in 2012, stories of events that led to his arrest have emerged.
According to a CNBC report, Zhong was a computer expert who lived a luxurious life. He drove expensive cars, including a Tesla, partied a lot, stayed at fancy hotels, shopped at luxury stores, and lived in a modest off-campus bungalow with an unusually tight home surveillance . He also bought a second home – a lake house with a dock in Gainesville, Georgia, stocked with boats, jet skis, a stripper pole, and lots of liquor.
The Break-in and Police Call
On March 13, 2019, Zhong called the Athens-Clarke County Police Department in a panic attack; someone had broken into his home and stolen 150 BTC worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Zhong’s complaint was the police department’s first crypto case, and as they were unfamiliar with the burgeoning sector, the case made no progress, and no suspect was arrested. As a result, Zhong recruited the services of local private investigator Robin Martinelli, who suspected through investigations that one of her client’s friends was responsible for the theft.
However, the then-28-year-old Silk Road scammer refused to believe Martinelli’s theories as he found it hard to accept that someone close to him could have betrayed him.
While Zhong tried to unravel his theft case, a group of agents from the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation unit attempted to solve the Silk Road 2012 theft. They had waited for years as the culprit of the crime transferred funds from account to account, using crypto mixers to obscure the direction of the assets.
Unfortunately for Zhong, he made a mistake while transferring $800 to one of his accounts within that period. This was spotted by blockchain analytics company Chainalysis, which traced the funds to a crypto exchange with know-your-customer rules and discovered that the account was registered in Zhong’s name. This was six months after Zhong called the police to report his BTC theft.
The Arrest
For further investigation, the IRS asked the Athens-Clarke County Police Department for help. The agencies joined forces and dispatched three investigators who approached Zhong on the premise that they were investigating the crime he called about. However, they were checking him out for the theft of the Silk Road bitcoins.
Zhong opened up to them and gave them a tour of his apartment while they searched for hidden compartments. He eventually opened his laptop, where they saw $60 million to $70 million worth of BTC, which they considered enough evidence that he was behind the 2012 theft.
When asked, Zhong claimed he had gotten into BTC early and mined thousands of the crypto asset. In truth, he was found to be among a group of early coders who engaged with the Bitcoin technology.
After all was said and done, the investigators showed up at Zhong’s house days later with a team of officers who raided the apartment searching for evidence. With the help of dogs trained to sniff out electronics, the officers found a popcorn tin that hid a computer holding millions of dollars worth of BTC, cash, precious metals, and physical bitcoins.
Zhong was whisked away, convicted, and is currently serving a one-year sentence at the federal prison camp in Montgomery, Alabama. US authorities are selling the stolen assets as their owners have refused to claim them.