Samourai Wallet cofounder Keonne Rodriguez received the maximum sentence this week of five years in prison for writing code. As a developer sits in a jail cell for building privacy tools, many in the Bitcoin community, including Max Keiser, are pushing for a full pardon.
Crypto crackdown: Beyond campaign promises
Donald Trump vowed during his campaign to put an end to the crackdown on crypto. To a certain extent, he’s been true to his word. Since he’s been in office, he’s pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, Binance’s founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, and issued a flurry of executive orders, such as the debanking order to put an official end to Operation Choke Point 2.0.
But the arrest and conviction of Samourai Wallet developers shows the continued clash between privacy, code, and the law, even with the White House’s pro-crypto pivot. And the contrast is harsh, as one Bitcoiner pointed out.
While banking giant JPMorgan paid $290 million to settle something as heinous as sex trafficking allegations in 2023, without a single top executive being jailed, the coder behind a Bitcoin privacy tool is convicted to serve five years’ hard time. As Bitcoin-centric tools developer Foundation, commented:
“The current administration often speaks in support of Bitcoin, yet the Justice Department continues to pursue policies that may predate this administration – targeting privacy technologies and open-source developers… Open-source developers deserve protection, not persecution.”
What is Samourai Wallet?
Samourai Wallet is a privacy-first Bitcoin wallet, co-founded by Keonne Rodriguez and William Lonergan Hill. It lets users mask their transaction histories and identities by using mixing features like Whirlpool and Ricochet.
The Department of Justice alleged that Samourai processed more than $2 billion in transactions and laundered over $100 million in criminal proceeds, including funds linked to hacking, fraud, drug trafficking, and murder-for-hire.
The core charges? Conspiracy to commit money laundering and operating an unlicensed money transmitting business, with prosecutors arguing that the creators marketed their software to people seeking to hide illicit funds. The devs pleaded guilty, and Rodriguez was given the maximum sentence of five years and ordered to pay a $250,000 fine. Hill will be sentenced later this month.
Ross Ulbricht, CZ, and a wave of pardons
The story doesn’t end with Samourai. The ghosts of cypherpunk past loom large: Ross Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road, received a full pardon from President Trump this year, walking free after a decade behind bars for operating the infamous dark web marketplace.
Meanwhile, Changpeng “CZ” Zhao, Binance’s founder, also saw the inside of a cell, but was pardoned after serving time on federal money laundering charges this autumn. It was another instance where Trump’s political calculus overlapped with crypto’s biggest personalities.
But while crypto devs get handed hefty sentences, financial titans like JPMorgan keep writing settlement checks and moving on unscathed.
Max Keiser and a growing chorus of Bitcoiners are urging Trump to issue a blanket pardon for the Samourai Wallet developers, framing the case as a battle for open-source financial privacy against creeping surveillance. They argue that prosecuting coders for privacy tools criminalizes not just software, but the very idea of financial autonomy.
Why this case matters for crypto
Samourai Wallet’s prosecution marks a chilling milestone in the war on privacy-first financial tools, as Wall Street banks continue to avoid direct accountability for criminal allegations, settling massive cases without jail time.
The push for a Samourai pardon is the tip of a growing movement: stand up for privacy, code, and the principles of financial freedom, or risk watching them put behind bars.
This is the new crypto election cycle, where the lines between code and crime, settlement and sentence, are more blurred than ever, and the fight for justice is the industry’s loudest call yet.
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