freebit13
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May 01, 2014, 03:53:46 PM |
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One of the biggest questions is whether you tried to resist the crime, so the fact that you "couldn't resist" necessarily makes it not entrapment.
Yeah, I tried to resist, I was mentally torn for hours before actually buying, I just couldn't resist; prove to me that I wasn't. /sarcasm You could always ask everyone if they are the FBI before buying coins from them, that should keep you in the clear 
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dreamspark
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May 01, 2014, 03:53:51 PM |
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Because you're buying the oil from Iran.
Who like the rest of the world primarily trade oil in the world reserve currency which it just so happens you are able to send them. Iranian banks have been cut off from the international bank of settlements due to sanctions and pressure from the U.S. gov. Right and I'm sure the only account that an Iranian oil tycoon has is an Iranian bank account. You're really missing the point. If the seller demands to do the deal in bitcoin for any or no reason, and you don't want to blow the deal, you meet the seller's terms. In extremely large transactions, those terms will likely include provisions for fluctuating value of the currency. Yeah I agree with that but if the issue for you aquiring the BTC is that its immpossible to buy that many then whoever is selling isnt going to get anyone able to meet their terms. The seller wants to sell as much as a buyer wants to buy, requring an unreasonable or immpossible payment method isn't going to get you any buyers, period. Going back to the original point how does an alternative crypto solve this problem?
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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May 01, 2014, 04:00:50 PM |
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derpinheimer
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May 01, 2014, 04:01:35 PM |
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This guy is really loading up on coins without moving the price... makes me very optimistic.
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billyjoeallen
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Hide your women
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May 01, 2014, 04:06:49 PM |
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Because you're buying the oil from Iran.
Who like the rest of the world primarily trade oil in the world reserve currency which it just so happens you are able to send them. Iranian banks have been cut off from the international bank of settlements due to sanctions and pressure from the U.S. gov. Right and I'm sure the only account that an Iranian oil tycoon has is an Iranian bank account. You're really missing the point. If the seller demands to do the deal in bitcoin for any or no reason, and you don't want to blow the deal, you meet the seller's terms. In extremely large transactions, those terms will likely include provisions for fluctuating value of the currency. Yeah I agree with that but if the issue for you aquiring the BTC is that its immpossible to buy that many then whoever is selling isnt going to get anyone able to meet their terms. The seller wants to sell as much as a buyer wants to buy, requring an unreasonable or immpossible payment method isn't going to get you any buyers, period. Going back to the original point how does an alternative crypto solve this problem? As I already said, an alt coin would not likely solve this particular problem. A Bitcoin derivative like a futures contract could. The seller could want a bitcoin payment to evade sanctions, avoid charge-backs, or any number of reasons or combination of reasons.
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octaft
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May 01, 2014, 04:07:08 PM |
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One of the biggest questions is whether you tried to resist the crime, so the fact that you "couldn't resist" necessarily makes it not entrapment.
Yeah, I tried to resist, I was mentally torn for hours before actually buying, I just couldn't resist; prove to me that I wasn't. /sarcasm You could always ask everyone if they are the FBI before buying coins from them, that should keep you in the clear  Incorrect. The police can flat-out lie to you and still have it not be considered entrapment. It's when they harass you over and over until you eventually cave that is considered entrapment, or when they threaten you in some way to the point where it would be a reasonable assumption that you committed the crime out of fear.
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NewLiberty
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May 01, 2014, 04:08:01 PM |
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Not if I was on that jury. "undue" is subjective. How were you going to buy bitcoins if they weren't for sale? If I'm a firefighter (and I am), I can't get credit for putting out a fire when I put oily rags next to a heater. Placing the ad is encouraging and enabling the "crime". If I as a private citizen did it, could be prosecuted for soliciting, then when a policemen does the same thing, he is entrapping. Fucking cops need to understand their job is crime prevention primarily and secondarily to assist in the solving and prosecution of crimes. Turning people into criminals so they can have someone to arrest is itself a criminal act.
So let's say I go onto a website to buy cocaine. I see an ad for cocaine, and contact the seller to buy it. How was I in any way pressured or entrapped to buy cocaine? I clearly was seeking out a way to buy cocaine, and almost certainly would have broken the law regardless of whether that person was an undercover cop. Now replace "cocaine" with "bitcoins" and it is the exact same situation. You absolutely did not go to localbitcoins with the express intent to not buy bitcoins, just like you didn't go onto that drug website to not buy cocaine. There are some gray areas regarding entrapment. This is absolutely not one of them. Even if the ad was sent to me directly regarding the sale, as long as they didn't keep hounding me after I said no, it would not be entrapment. I think this goes back to what Billy said earlier: it's not a cops job to be going around putting up ads for cocaine. It's their job to prevent crime, not incite/entice crime. That is a valid opinion, but not the way the law currently sees it. Indeed. Forfeiture laws create the incentive for LEO to entice folks to commit crimes so that they can seize their property. The LEO department gets to keep a significant percentage of the proceeds. Some of this goes to expense accounts which directly affect the quality of life of the LEOs. Our laws have created law enforcement that is in the business of creating crime. ... oh yea... look at those walls...
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octaft
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May 01, 2014, 04:11:30 PM |
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You do realize that nothing needs to be certain, only "beyond a reasonable doubt" to get a conviction, right? If someone goes on a website designed to distribute something, then purchases that something after seeing an ad, it's pretty reasonable to think that they intended to buy that something regardless of which ad they read.
To say that it is an unreasonable assumption would surely be independent thought, but independent does not mean correct.
"correct" according to you? It's reasonable to doubt that a person is just as likely to commit a crime when he sees an ad encouraging him to commit a crime as when he doesn't. The ad makes him more likely to buy, as all ads do. That's why we have ads. If ads didn't work, Madison Avenue would be just another street. The ad made him more likely to buy and we don't know by how much, but if it's not reasonable to say that it could have made the difference between deciding to buy and not deciding to buy, then it would also be unreasonable for anyone but cops to place ads in the first place. Since other people do place ads, reasonable doubt should be a given. Nothing needs to be certain, but the prosecutor's case isn't only that that ad didn't convince him to buy. The prosecution has to claim that the ad COULDN'T convince him to buy in order to meet the threshold of reasonable doubt. That's a tough sell. You'd need twelve jurors who never placed or responded to an ad. It's quite contrarian to argue that someone visiting a site designed to distribute something, then buying that something, was not intending to buy regardless of that one particular ad out of potentially 100's. I notice my edit wasn't included in your quote, so allow me to put it up again: Let's try this with something legal that isn't bitcoin to see if it sticks. I want to buy the most beautiful bow for my daughters birthday present. I go on etsy or some shit and start looking up bows. I see this one ad with this terrific bow, it's so beautiful and perfect! So I buy it. Wouldn't it be reasonable to say if I didn't see that ad, I would not have simply given up on buying bows, but rather would have bought a different bow?
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billyjoeallen
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May 01, 2014, 04:11:42 PM |
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This guy is really loading up on coins without moving the price... makes me very optimistic.
Optimistic that we won't run out of sellers?
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KFR
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May 01, 2014, 04:16:02 PM |
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freebit13
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May 01, 2014, 04:16:41 PM |
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One of the biggest questions is whether you tried to resist the crime, so the fact that you "couldn't resist" necessarily makes it not entrapment.
Yeah, I tried to resist, I was mentally torn for hours before actually buying, I just couldn't resist; prove to me that I wasn't. /sarcasm You could always ask everyone if they are the FBI before buying coins from them, that should keep you in the clear  Incorrect. The police can flat-out lie to you and still have it not be considered entrapment. It's when they harass you over and over until you eventually cave that is considered entrapment, or when they threaten you in some way to the point where it would be a reasonable assumption that you committed the crime out of fear. They don't need to be that blatant, as I said it's a case by case basis, I've been doing some reading and now my head hurts because this is something I doubt I'll ever face because I would not go by the 'normal' court process in any case and I seriously doubt that bitcoin would be made illegal and I'm not up to researching and discussing law right now. Stated generally, prohibited inducement "includes soliciting, pro-posing, initiating, broaching or suggesting the commission of the offense charged. http://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2073&context=dljI'm sure everyone will read that (probably not) and have hundreds of different interpretations, that's why everyone has to go to court, it's all up to interpretation.
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billyjoeallen
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May 01, 2014, 04:17:01 PM |
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You do realize that nothing needs to be certain, only "beyond a reasonable doubt" to get a conviction, right? If someone goes on a website designed to distribute something, then purchases that something after seeing an ad, it's pretty reasonable to think that they intended to buy that something regardless of which ad they read.
To say that it is an unreasonable assumption would surely be independent thought, but independent does not mean correct.
"correct" according to you? It's reasonable to doubt that a person is just as likely to commit a crime when he sees an ad encouraging him to commit a crime as when he doesn't. The ad makes him more likely to buy, as all ads do. That's why we have ads. If ads didn't work, Madison Avenue would be just another street. The ad made him more likely to buy and we don't know by how much, but if it's not reasonable to say that it could have made the difference between deciding to buy and not deciding to buy, then it would also be unreasonable for anyone but cops to place ads in the first place. Since other people do place ads, reasonable doubt should be a given. Nothing needs to be certain, but the prosecutor's case isn't only that that ad didn't convince him to buy. The prosecution has to claim that the ad COULDN'T convince him to buy in order to meet the threshold of reasonable doubt. That's a tough sell. You'd need twelve jurors who never placed or responded to an ad. It's quite contrarian to argue that someone visiting a site designed to distribute something, then buying that something, was not intending to buy regardless of that one particular ad out of potentially 100's. I notice my edit wasn't included in your quote, so allow me to put it up again: Let's try this with something legal that isn't bitcoin to see if it sticks. I want to buy the most beautiful bow for my daughters birthday present. I go on etsy or some shit and start looking up bows. I see this one ad with this terrific bow, it's so beautiful and perfect! So I buy it. Wouldn't it be reasonable to say if I didn't see that ad, I would not have simply given up on buying bows, but rather would have bought a different bow? No, it's not that simple. It's reasonable that you might have bought her something else. You might have bought her another bow, but you might have bought her something else. Your case is reasonable, but it's not beyond a reasonable doubt. You seem to have a fundamental misunderstanding of the burden of proof that applies here.
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boumalo
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May 01, 2014, 04:17:10 PM |
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One of the biggest questions is whether you tried to resist the crime, so the fact that you "couldn't resist" necessarily makes it not entrapment.
Yeah, I tried to resist, I was mentally torn for hours before actually buying, I just couldn't resist; prove to me that I wasn't. /sarcasm You could always ask everyone if they are the FBI before buying coins from them, that should keep you in the clear  Incorrect. The police can flat-out lie to you and still have it not be considered entrapment. It's when they harass you over and over until you eventually cave that is considered entrapment, or when they threaten you in some way to the point where it would be a reasonable assumption that you committed the crime out of fear. In the US, in other countries it will be easier to prove entrapment To all the bears : Bitcoin is only valued 5billions atm; it is ridiculously cheap
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bitcoinsrus
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May 01, 2014, 04:19:37 PM |
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One of the biggest questions is whether you tried to resist the crime, so the fact that you "couldn't resist" necessarily makes it not entrapment.
Yeah, I tried to resist, I was mentally torn for hours before actually buying, I just couldn't resist; prove to me that I wasn't. /sarcasm You could always ask everyone if they are the FBI before buying coins from them, that should keep you in the clear  Incorrect. The police can flat-out lie to you and still have it not be considered entrapment. It's when they harass you over and over until you eventually cave that is considered entrapment, or when they threaten you in some way to the point where it would be a reasonable assumption that you committed the crime out of fear. In the US, in other countries it will be easier to prove entrapment To all the bears : Bitcoin is only valued 5billions atm; it is ridiculously cheap I am not familiar with commodities and what they should be worth. What market cap is bitcoin worth (to you)? (50 bn? 500bn?)
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howzar
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May 01, 2014, 04:32:03 PM |
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By the way is this the longest thread ever created?
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adamstgBit
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May 01, 2014, 04:34:03 PM |
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By the way is this the longest thread ever created?
on the entire internet yes.
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octaft
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May 01, 2014, 04:35:00 PM |
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You do realize that nothing needs to be certain, only "beyond a reasonable doubt" to get a conviction, right? If someone goes on a website designed to distribute something, then purchases that something after seeing an ad, it's pretty reasonable to think that they intended to buy that something regardless of which ad they read.
To say that it is an unreasonable assumption would surely be independent thought, but independent does not mean correct.
"correct" according to you? It's reasonable to doubt that a person is just as likely to commit a crime when he sees an ad encouraging him to commit a crime as when he doesn't. The ad makes him more likely to buy, as all ads do. That's why we have ads. If ads didn't work, Madison Avenue would be just another street. The ad made him more likely to buy and we don't know by how much, but if it's not reasonable to say that it could have made the difference between deciding to buy and not deciding to buy, then it would also be unreasonable for anyone but cops to place ads in the first place. Since other people do place ads, reasonable doubt should be a given. Nothing needs to be certain, but the prosecutor's case isn't only that that ad didn't convince him to buy. The prosecution has to claim that the ad COULDN'T convince him to buy in order to meet the threshold of reasonable doubt. That's a tough sell. You'd need twelve jurors who never placed or responded to an ad. It's quite contrarian to argue that someone visiting a site designed to distribute something, then buying that something, was not intending to buy regardless of that one particular ad out of potentially 100's. I notice my edit wasn't included in your quote, so allow me to put it up again: Let's try this with something legal that isn't bitcoin to see if it sticks. I want to buy the most beautiful bow for my daughters birthday present. I go on etsy or some shit and start looking up bows. I see this one ad with this terrific bow, it's so beautiful and perfect! So I buy it. Wouldn't it be reasonable to say if I didn't see that ad, I would not have simply given up on buying bows, but rather would have bought a different bow? No, it's not that simple. It's reasonable that you might have bought her something else. You might have bought her another bow, but you might have bought her something else. Your case is reasonable, but it's not beyond a reasonable doubt. You seem to have a fundamental misunderstanding of the burden of proof that applies here. Yeah it's a bad analogy on my part because the place would have to be selling specifically bows and only bows for it to work. On a personal level, I agree totally with the sentiment. In addition, I think busting small time buyers who only plan to consume is a huge waste of money and resources spent catching them, putting them on trial, and imprisoning them. Why not legalize it, save a ton of money when we stop the "war on drugs," and take away some power from the criminal organizations that are currently distributing it? What I am saying is, according to what I have read and how I interpret it (not being a lawyer or an officer of the law), these arguments you are presenting would be quite suspect in court.
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adamstgBit
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May 01, 2014, 04:36:39 PM |
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460 resistance destined to become support?
I think so!
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bigdave
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May 01, 2014, 04:38:38 PM |
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460 resistance destined to become support?
I think so!
I'd like to see one more drop in the 410-425 range.
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Richy_T
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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May 01, 2014, 04:41:01 PM |
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Ah. I remember that monster. The best time to use it is in the middle of the night when there aren't many cars! I never got near it. I did, however, live in Basingstoke for a while, otherwise known as "Roundabout City". Unfortunately, I didn't have a motorcycle at the time.
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