A federal appeals court in New York yesterday confirmed Ulbricht's 2015 conviction and sentence, rejecting his claim of an unfair trial and that being dealt the maximum sentence of life in prison without parole was unreasonably harsh under the law.
The appeals court agreed that the sentence was possibly tougher than the judges might have imposed themselves.
However, they said, based on the crimes and the law, including Ulbricht's attempt to have several people murdered, it was "within the range" of appropriate punishments.
"Moreover, he attempted to commission at least five murders to protect his criminal enterprise. Those facts render his case distinguishable from those who committed other crimes using Silk Road or otherwise facilitated its operation."
Ulbricht, 33, launched Silk Road in 2011 as an anonymous online market where anyone using Tor technology and Bitcoin currency could buy and sell anything.
Justice authorities estimated that some USD 200 million worth of heroin, cocaine and other drugs were exchanged on the site over two years before the FBI shut it down.
In his 2015 trial, a landmark case in the murky world of online crime, Ulbricht's lawyers had sought to negotiate a 20 -year sentence, and government prosecutors had not asked the life-without-parole extreme.
But US District Judge Katherine Forrest gave the harshest punishment possible, telling Ulbricht: "What you did was unprecedented.... You have to pay the consequences.
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