The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie

He's Serving 5 Years in Prison for Bitcoin Privacy Software

15 snips
Dec 19, 2025
Keonne Rodriguez, founder of Samourai Wallet, discusses his groundbreaking noncustodial bitcoin privacy software and the serious legal challenges he faces, including a five-year prison sentence. He explains the importance of privacy in digital cash, the technological nuances of his wallet, and the government's claims about criminal activity. Rodriguez confronts the implications of his case for privacy rights, innovation, and free expression. He reflects on the realities of his guilty plea and the risks for future developers in the cryptocurrency space.
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INSIGHT

Enforcement Drives Developers Underground

  • After the arrests, anonymous developers forked Samourai and ran it more covertly via Tor.
  • Rodriguez says enforcement pushes innovation underground rather than eliminating demand for privacy tools.
INSIGHT

Pleas Reflect Process, Not Just Guilt

  • Prosecutorial maneuvering (withheld FinCEN letter, judge reassignment) shaped plea decisions more than merits.
  • Rodriguez pleaded guilty because denied motions and feared a harsh judge and trial penalty, not because he admitted wrongdoing.
INSIGHT

Chain Analysis Is A Black Box

  • Chain-analysis firms' opaque methods underpin government's claims about tainted funds.
  • Rodriguez argues their black-box heuristics can't be independently examined and may be unreliable.
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