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American Kingpin
Book

American Kingpin

The Epic Hunt for the Criminal Mastermind Behind the Silk Road

Portfolio, 2017 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Engaging

Recommendation

Nick Bilton’s account of the rise and fall of the drug-dealing Silk Road website is an engrossing true-crime techno-thriller. After finishing college, Ross Ulbricht returned to his Texas hometown and, working mostly alone on a laptop and teaching himself programming as he went along, he built an anonymous online marketplace for drugs and other contraband. Over the next three years, he restyled himself as the Dread Pirate Roberts, scooped up millions in profits, began ordering hits on his enemies and inspired a massive manhunt involving four US federal agencies. You’ll meet a cast right out of a screenwriter’s dreams: noble crime-fighters, dirty cops, a sleuthing IRS agent and villains who range from the chillingly efficient to the comically inept. The inscrutable figure of the Dread Pirate Roberts is at the center – a man capable of altruistically clearing litter from a park one day and sanctioning the sale of cyanide and human organs the next. getAbstract recommends this saga to cyber-security specialists, drug-policy officials, those interested in drug policy and people who relish ripped-from-the-headlines nonfiction.

Take-Aways

  • The Silk Road was a site on the Dark Web that sold drugs and other contraband.
  • Ross Ulbricht of Austin, Texas, created the site almost single-handedly and launched it online in January 2011.
  • A libertarian, he believed the Silk Road freed users from the laws of an illegitimate government. He thought his site would lead to drug legalization.

About the Author

Special correspondent for Vanity Fair and CNBC contributor Nick Bilton was formerly a columnist for The New York Times.


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    V. W. 6 years ago
    This internet crime is a whole other animal! Wow!!!
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    E. B. 7 years ago
    A cool interesting book from a mainstream publisher- what a refreshing change from the boring academic titles get abstract usually summarizes ...