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Top Silk Road Drug Dealer Was Flipped By Feds

Docta

Greenlighter
Joined
Aug 16, 2013
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43
OCTOBER 21--One of the top narcotics dealers on Silk Road, the recently shuttered online drug bazaar, secretly began cooperating with federal agents after his Seattle-area home was raided in late-July, The Smoking Gun has learned.

The disclosure that Steven Sadler, known online as “Nod,” was flipped will likely cause significant distress for his large Silk Road customer base, which included retail and wholesale buyers of heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine.

stevensadler.jpg


Additionally, suppliers for Sadler, 40, will likely also be concerned that they have been exposed to law enforcement scrutiny.

Sadler’s cooperation was disclosed at a brief U.S. District Court hearing earlier this month, according to an official audiotape of the proceeding before Magistrate Judge Brian Tsuchida.

The hastily arranged court appearance for Sadler (seen at right) was prompted by the FBI’s arrest a day earlier of Ross Ulbricht, who has been charged with being the mastermind behind the Silk Road site, which operated on the “darknet" (or “deep web”). Simultaneous to Ulrich’s bust, federal investigators shut down the two-year-old site, which relied on the anonymizing tool Tor to shield both vendors and patrons.

During the October 2 hearing, federal prosecutor Thomas Woods told Tsuchida that “Mr. Sadler has been cooperating, working for the government for the past two months.” Referring to “unusual circumstances,” Woods noted that “through reasons unrelated to” Sadler, his cooperation “abruptly came to an end this morning.” Sadler’s lawyer told Tsuchida that her client was in “constant communication with the government.”

While Woods did not further detail Sadler’s cooperation, it appears likely that he would have been required to assist agents in the analysis of his computer data, customer lists, or financial records. In similar cases, agents have also assumed the identity of cooperators and, posing as the arrested individual, carried on online interactions with hoodwinked customers and suppliers.

Woods--who did not mention Ulbricht’s October 1 arrest or the subsequent shuttering of Silk Road--did not seek Sadler’s detention on a criminal complaint charging him and coconspirator Jenna White with conspiracy to distribute cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine (a felony charge carrying a maximum 20-year prison term).

As part of his bond conditions, Sadler--who has an extensive recent history of drug abuse--was ordered not to use any controlled substances while on pretrial release. He admitted violating those terms about ten days later by using Suboxone, an opiate inhibitor, that was prescribed to a roommate.

6silkroad.jpg


He also acknowledged using methamphetamine the morning of his October 2 arraignment and heroin one day earlier.

According to his Silk Road vendor profile, Sadler’s sterling customer feedback included more than 1400 reviews posted over a four-month period earlier this year. Sadler, who purchased a Silk Road vendor account in June 2012, was “ranked in the top 1% of sellers,” according to the criminal complaint.

Sadler agreed to cooperate with federal investigators after his Bellevue apartment was raided July 31 by postal inspectors and Department of Homeland Security agents. Investigators seized heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine, a .45 caliber pistol, cash, and “vacuum and heat-sealing equipment” from Sadler’s residence, according to court records.

Agents nabbed Sadler after a year-long investigation that focused on narcotics being sent to customers nationwide from the Seattle area. The drug shipments were contained in Express Mail packages sent by Sadler and White from nearly 40 separate post offices. In addition to interdicting suspect packages, federal agents attached tracking devices to autos used by Sadler and White, and made undercover purchases on Silk Road from “Nod.”

Investigators also were aided by a confidential informant who agreed to cooperate after agents seized several packages mailed to her by Silk Road heroin dealers. In a TSG interview, the woman--a business owner in her thirties--said she had made several heroin purchases from “Nod” and allowed investigators to take over her Silk Road account to make undercover drug purchases.

A self-described “junkie” who has been clean since May, the informant said she helped a postal inspector navigate Silk Road and explained how to fund an account with Bitcoin, the virtual currency used for purchases. When an undercover drug purchase failed to arrive, a postal inspector--apparently sensing a rip-off--sent the woman an e-mail seeking advice as to how to address the missing Express Mail parcel with the narcotics seller. When the informant referred to the package “going missing,” the inspector replied, “I know the package is not missing, I work for the post office…hahaha. They just have not sent it.”

In addition to identifying Express Mail packages containing narcotics, postal inspectors last year also seized a parcel sent by Sadler that contained $3200. The package, which was opened after a drug-detection dog “alerted to the presence of narcotics,” was addressed to Michael Shapiro, a 28-year-old California man.

michaelshapiro.jpg


The cash shipment was headed for a $6 million dollar Bel Air home (7400-square-feet with five bedrooms and eight bathrooms) owned by Shapiro’s in-laws. Pictured at left, Shapiro declined to answer TSG questions about the package sent to him by Sadler. Until about a month again, Shapiro worked for the National Football League as an ad operations manager in the NFL’s Culver City office.

While Sadler’s narcotics operation was headquartered in his Bellevue apartment, investigators reported that an undercover cocaine buy in mid-June was mailed to a cooperating informant from West Hollywood, California. Around that time, “Nod” sent a message to the informant’s Silk Road account reporting that he was sending the coke “from the road.”

Sadler and White were named earlier this month in a five-count indictment charging them with conspiracy to distribute narcotics, distribution of cocaine and heroin, and possession of cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine.

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/silk-road-dealer-cooperating-567432
 
Sucks for anyone that basically ever talked to these guys, now they are probably on some file on a hard drive or server somewhere.
 
i knew there was a good reason i could never bring myself to buy from silk road directly.... no matter how sick i was

even through .tor and everything, i would never feel secure doing dirty deals through the internet, the high chances of being ripped off, getting wrong/bad drugs, and obviously, law enforcement.

i keep it old school, with friend of a friends connections, and cell phones
 
He better be part of a witness protection program, or someone is going to get him.

What a shitty human being. I almost hope someone does get him.
 
Unfortunately, the mammoth threat of U.S. federal sentencing is a great tool for obliterating the feeble integrity of a lot of drug criminals.
 
nasty business. it seems more and more like the online drug thing is just like splashing around in a shark tank.
 
I got the impression they convinced him that he would sit in jail till his trial if he didn't flip. If he is hooked on opiates and about to spend years in jail I bet he is worried more bout staving off the sickness for just a bit longer.
 
nasty business. it seems more and more like the online drug thing is just like splashing around in a shark tank.
QFT.. but the violent street copping thing is probably safer from the feds because they are all about this shit.. [/drugwar] duhh
 
I'm not surprised he flipped. For someone who has no ideals (unlike the likes of Ulbricht seems to) what do you really expect? The guy was willing to sell heroin to people he didn't know. What do you now expect him to do? Turn round and protect his customers by sacraficing his own future? Use your brains people, ofcourse he is going to work with the feds.

I wonder how long he is likely to now get in prison? Will he even go to prison? Now they've named him, posted his picture, told everyone he is an informant etc? Surely it would be dangerous for him to be in a normal prison at least.
 
Most likely the next thing we hear about him is he is found dead some where
 
I wonder how long he is likely to now get in prison? Will he even go to prison? Now they've named him, posted his picture, told everyone he is an informant etc? Surely it would be dangerous for him to be in a normal prison at least.

The first rat to flip gets the best of the cheese so the deal has been done with the feds so I cant see Sadler doing ant real time. Feds obviously have everything they need from him because the hearing was in open court. He had to make bail, jail time would have him dealt with by the rat patrol inside. There turned him out on the street knowing that the outcome of the rat trap is always the same.

Steven Sadler has gone to a place that there is no coming back from he's done.
 
That first customer who got popped should have denied all knowledge. Admitting it and co operating is the type of shit that happens a lot in online world. "No that's not mine I didn't order that. One of my ex girlfriends must have framed me" Why anyone would admit to anything in that situation is beyond me.
I prefer my real life dealer because if he got popped he wouldn't sell out all his customers or his supplier. Too many snitches now, you knew the risk when you signed up. This is why gangs and organized crime run drugs world wide, people are just too afraid to snitch on them. Some fat guy selling drugs via computer in another state cant possibly elicit the same kind of fear your local gangs do.
 
Remember kids; "name all of your ex's" your response is ...


"Oh there's no way for me to remember all their names....you go first. "
 
Never trust a police officer offering you anything.

Unless its a ticket, a beating, or some other form of abuse.
 
Still amazes me to think if this guy was working for the feds since july howany people bought coke, heroin and methamphetamine from the feds? I bet everything he had must have been top notch aswell.
 
about original article.. *yawn* same as it ever was.

Hasnt worked so far so why will it make any difference now????????????????????

Yeah so many people will and have flipped because of the insane life ending penalties you impose, well meant but have had no impact and have destroyed so many lives.. reality is a nice place and every one should at least visit.
 
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