Bkyf California man guilty of killing military vet, friend
Elite FBI cyber investigators bring viewers inside the takedown of the mastermind behind a website offering drugs, guns -- even murders for hire were discussed -- in The FBI Declassified: The Dangerous Journey on the Silk Road airing Tuesday, November 10 at 10/9c on CBS.In 2013, 29-year-old Ross Ulbricht was arrested by the FBI for running a website called Silk Road. On the site, people from around the world could buy and sell illicit drugs, weapons, poisons, and services such as compute
stanley cup r hacking. In Silk Road forums, users could even discuss murders-for-hire. In the three years of its existence, Silk Road racked up more than $200 million in total sales revenue, with Ulbricht taking a cut on each sale. Ulbricht created Silk Road out of a desire to have an open marketplace where people could buy and trade anything they wanted, without government regulation. To maintain users and his own anonymity, Ulbricht set up Silk Road on the dark web, a part of the internet invisible to traditional search engines. Silk Road did not accept cash or credit cards; users had to pay with bitcoin, a cryptocurrency. All transactions were encrypted and hence untraceable. Those activitie
stanley cup s put the site on the radar of multiple law enforcement agencies, including the FBI s elite New York cyber team. Julia Vie and Ross Ulbricht
stanley cups Julia Vie/Vivian s Muse When Ulbricht created the website, he w Sefo Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs died from deadly mix of alcohol, fentanyl, oxycodone, medical examiner says
The White House is finalizing plans for President Trump, with Vice President Pence at his side, to announce on Wednesday, Dec. 6, that the U.S. will recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.L
salomon ast Monday the decision had been made, although by Saturday morning, the president had not yet given his final approval because there remains internal disagreement over the decision within the White House. If he does make the announcement, it would make Mr. Trump the first U.S. president to recognize Jerusalem as Israel s capital. While he would be making an unprecedented announcement in recognizing Jerusalem, he still plans to sign the waiver that keeps the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv, in keeping with the decisions of past
hoka presidents.CBS News reported earlier this week that U.S. diplomatic postshave been put on alertbecause of heightened security concerns in the Middle East, which stem from Mr. Trump s active consideration of the recognition of Jerusalem. The security alert was sent out to U.S. posts in Muslim countries as a precaution. Another U.S. official told CBS News that the president sretweets of anti-Muslim videoshas added to the security concerns at U.S. posts.Secretary of State Rex Tillersonand the State Department have opposed t
salomon his decision. Secretary of Defense James Mattis has added his voice to concerns about potential security threats to U.S. personnel, given Jerusalem s significance to all three monotheistic religions in the territ