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Author Topic: FBI seized coins sold = bitcoin legal in USA?  (Read 2602 times)
ashleysly
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June 16, 2014, 09:59:55 PM
 #21

Maybe USA will now realise that their economy is not as good as BTC and should adopt BTC and make it perfectly legal to do whatever with it... within reason.

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June 16, 2014, 10:35:49 PM
 #22

The sale will make it easier to argue with banks that don't like Bitcoin transactions  Grin
That was my point. They will create common law. BIG federal agency can legally accept cash from bitcoin sell. Previously there were voices (from politicians, bankers etc.) that bitcoin is bad and it's position is unknown and everybody for safety should avoid it. FBI selling those coins just admits that bitcoin is in bounds of law and there's no fear Wink

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June 16, 2014, 11:46:33 PM
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bitcoin has been 100% legal in US since late last year. i'm guessing by the time the ETFs hit wall street all the regulation will be crystal clear.

FBI selling bitcoin is awesome.

the fact that they stole SR users funds makes one wonder if stealing peoples BTC fundz is legal... the FBI's doin it!  Cheesy

Any news when tthe etf will hit? Right now it still takes considerable effort to buy BTCs... with the ETF we will have an influx of cash money.
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June 16, 2014, 11:50:05 PM
 #24

bitcoin has been 100% legal in US since late last year. i'm guessing by the time the ETFs hit wall street all the regulation will be crystal clear.

FBI selling bitcoin is awesome.

the fact that they stole SR users funds makes one wonder if stealing peoples BTC fundz is legal... the FBI's doin it!  Cheesy

Any news when tthe etf will hit? Right now it still takes considerable effort to buy BTCs... with the ETF we will have an influx of cash money.

not sure about the etf, since the little roadbump with the bank a while back. but the winkdex (price index) made it on bloomberg, so could be a step in right direction.

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maker88
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June 16, 2014, 11:56:27 PM
 #25

bitcoin has been 100% legal in US since late last year. i'm guessing by the time the ETFs hit wall street all the regulation will be crystal clear.

FBI selling bitcoin is awesome.

the fact that they stole SR users funds makes one wonder if stealing peoples BTC fundz is legal... the FBI's doin it!  Cheesy

Any news when tthe etf will hit? Right now it still takes considerable effort to buy BTCs... with the ETF we will have an influx of cash money.

i mean in my state it takes as much effort as going to the airport and using the atm. sure not exactly a short trip to logan but theres going to be more and more bitcoin ATMs soon.
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June 17, 2014, 12:32:24 AM
 #26

If the FBI  didn't care enough to destroy drug related bitcoin they seized but instead chose to profit from a sale,  they set a precident  for similar future transactions whether they like it or not. 
(1) The FBI did not held the auction to "profit" from it.  They had in custody some valuable property (bitcoin) that, after the court declared the seizure legitimate, belonged by right to all the citizens of the US, equally.  As such, the government could not destroy that property, and was morally bound to distribute it in some way to the citizens, or use it in their benefit, equally.  So the government (not a particular agency) held an auction with the sole purpose of exchanging that property for an equivalent amount of dollars -- because dollars are much easier to spend in benefit of the people etc. than rolls royces, mansions in Alaska, frozen chicken livers, or bitcoins.  The dollars will go to the Treasury, or perhaps to some specific agency, but always with the presumption that they are ultimately distributed to the citizens, normally in the form of public service.

(2) The coins were "dirty" (from the USG point of view)  while they were in possession of SilkRoad/DPR, because they were the profit from illegal activity and could be used by a criminal organization or person.  Once the coins were seized, they became the rightful possession of the people of the USA, in the government custody, so they obviously became "clean" at that point.

Likewise, banknotes stolen from a bank or paid for ransom are in principle "dirty", but if the police seizes them, or returns them to the rightful owner, of course they become "clean" again.  Moreover, if a pizza parlor accepts a stolen banknote without being aware of its source, the banknote naturally becomes "clean" too; but no one else would know about that.  This is basically why databases of "dirty" banknote numbers are perpetually out-of-date and have limited use.

(3) Stuff being "dirty" is distinct of it being "illegal".  The cocaine sold by a drug peddler is an illegal substance, while the cash that he collects is only "dirty", and would remain dirty if passed on t o accomplices; but is obviously not "illegal stuff".  The government is supposed to destroy illegal stuff, like drugs or explosives, because it has no legal way of converting it to dollars or using it for public good.  On the other hand, cars  and bitcoins can be legally owned and traded if they are "clean", therefore they can (must) be auctioned once seized, even though they were "dirty" before the seizure.

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bitcoinsrus
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June 17, 2014, 12:43:20 AM
 #27

If the FBI  didn't care enough to destroy drug related bitcoin they seized but instead chose to profit from a sale,  they set a precident  for similar future transactions whether they like it or not. 
the sole purpose of exchanging that property for an equivalent amount of dollars -- because dollars are much easier to spend in benefit of the people etc. than rolls royces, mansions in Alaska, frozen chicken livers, or bitcoins. 

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June 17, 2014, 12:52:03 AM
 #28

The sale will make it easier to argue with banks that don't like Bitcoin transactions  Grin
I am afrait it won't.

First of all, bitcoin is supposed to take away some of their businesses.  Why would they like it, or help it in any way?

Moreover bitcoin exchanges and other companies that convert between dollars and bitcoins are easily used for money laundering, bribing, financing terrorists, paying for drugs and child porn, bitcoin ponzis, internet gambling, etc. -- perhaps even without their owners being aware of it.  So, if banks were to provide dollar input/output services to those companies, they would risk being charged with aiding those crimes -- especially if they have been warned that such crimes are probably taking place.  That, in my understanding, is the main rationale behind the PBoC restrictions in China, the bans in other countries, and the "spontaneous" bank account closures in Japan, Australia, USA, etc.

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acs267
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June 17, 2014, 12:56:11 AM
 #29

The sale will make it easier to argue with banks that don't like Bitcoin transactions  Grin
I am afrait it won't.

First of all, bitcoin is supposed to take away some of their businesses.  Why would they like it, or help it in any way?

Moreover bitcoin exchanges and other companies that convert between dollars and bitcoins are easily used for money laundering, bribing, financing terrorists, paying for drugs and child porn, bitcoin ponzis, internet gambling, etc. -- perhaps even without their owners being aware of it.  So, if banks were to provide dollar input/output services to those companies, they would risk being charged with aiding those crimes -- especially if they have been warned that such crimes are probably taking place.  That, in my understanding, is the main rationale behind the PBoC restrictions in China, the bans in other countries, and the "spontaneous" bank account closures in Japan, Australia, USA, etc.


Stop you there, bucko. Fiat has been used for all of those reasons, for centuries, and 24/7. How does dollars --> Bitcoin change that? I understand your point, but, really?
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June 17, 2014, 01:20:15 AM
 #30

bitcoin exchanges and other companies that convert between dollars and bitcoins are easily used for money laundering, bribing, financing terrorists, paying for drugs and child porn, bitcoin ponzis, internet gambling, etc.
Stop you there, bucko. Fiat has been used for all of those reasons, for centuries, and 24/7. How does dollars --> Bitcoin change that? I understand your point, but, really?
Because of all the bitcoin's "qualities" that are supposed to make it better than cash: it can be instantaneously transferred all over the world, address owners need not identify themselves,  transactions cannot be stopped or reversed, transactions happen in no particular country and hence under no particular jurisdiction, ...

These features of bitcoin are intentionally and explicitly meant to avoid the controls on money flow that governments have built into other payment methods over several decades, to fight all those crimes (and tax evasion too, BTW).

Obviously a site like SilkRoad could not work with cash or credit cards.   Need one say more?

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maker88
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June 17, 2014, 01:29:57 AM
 #31

I am dumb. Are we suppose to pay taxes on bitcoins? mining them, bartering them, etc?

Might hit me in the ass in 50 years from now for buying a psu or electronic component with bitcoin?

if you live in america yeah, you've had to pay capital gains taxes since they classified it last year.
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June 17, 2014, 01:36:23 AM
 #32

Are we suppose to pay taxes on bitcoins? mining them, bartering them, etc?
Definitely.  The US IRS and their equivalents in several other countries have issued instructions on how to report income in bitcoins or from bitcoin trading.  Omitting those gains from your tax reports would be as illegal as omitting any other source of income.

IIRC, the US IRS in particular has decided that bitcoin is property, not a currency, and so gains from it must be reported like gains from property buying and selling.  The UK has exempted it from VAT, but not from other taxes.  And so on.

Look around in this forum, there must be whole threads about taxation. 

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JorgeStolfi
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June 17, 2014, 01:44:12 AM
 #33

omg I am safe. I dont file taxes. Don't need to.
Edit:
New Loop Hole?
If your total income (including gains in/from bitcoin) qualifies for exemption, you are safe.   Bitcoins are not special in that way.

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June 17, 2014, 01:59:40 AM
 #34

If your total income (including gains in/from bitcoin) qualifies for exemption, you are safe.   Bitcoins are not special in that way.
I am on disability. So how and where does this play?
I can't work, and they never asked if I have use or interfered in bitcoin. Only stocks, bonds, off shore accounts etc.
I don't know, you had better ask a tax preparer... But it is definitely viewed like property of some well-established type -- like stocks, or like real estate, or like something else.

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June 17, 2014, 02:04:15 AM
 #35

This is not my fault. They never asked about bitcoin/cryptocurrency.
The IRS instructions about bitcoin were issued very recently.  I don't know whether they were relevant for this year's tax filing.  Again, you had better ask a tax preparer.
EDIT: If I recall correctly, one implication of their rules is that you must keep records of when you bought and sold your bitcoins, because the tax rate depends on how long you kept them, like for stocks.

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JorgeStolfi
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June 17, 2014, 02:13:08 AM
 #36

They better make it crystal fucking clear.

This seems to be their note about bitcoin: http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-14-21.pdf?utm_source=3.31.2014+Tax+Alert

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segeln
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June 17, 2014, 01:22:00 PM
 #37

The IRS instructions about bitcoin were issued very recently.  I don't know whether they were relevant for this year's tax filing.  
no, they announced it is not relevant for this year,the current tax season
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June 17, 2014, 01:42:08 PM
 #38

bitcoin exchanges and other companies that convert between dollars and bitcoins are easily used for money laundering, bribing, financing terrorists, paying for drugs and child porn, bitcoin ponzis, internet gambling, etc.
Stop you there, bucko. Fiat has been used for all of those reasons, for centuries, and 24/7. How does dollars --> Bitcoin change that? I understand your point, but, really?
Because of all the bitcoin's "qualities" that are supposed to make it better than cash: it can be instantaneously transferred all over the world, address owners need not identify themselves,  transactions cannot be stopped or reversed, transactions happen in no particular country and hence under no particular jurisdiction, ...

These features of bitcoin are intentionally and explicitly meant to avoid the controls on money flow that governments have built into other payment methods over several decades, to fight all those crimes (and tax evasion too, BTW).

Obviously a site like SilkRoad could not work with cash or credit cards.   Need one say more?


Every form of currency will have benefits and drawbacks, and some people will use it for illicit activities. I think the pros outweigh the cons in the case of BTC. Can't say the same for fiat currencies though.

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June 17, 2014, 02:21:16 PM
 #39

This is not my fault. They never asked about bitcoin/cryptocurrency.
The IRS instructions about bitcoin were issued very recently.  I don't know whether they were relevant for this year's tax filing.  Again, you had better ask a tax preparer.
EDIT: If I recall correctly, one implication of their rules is that you must keep records of when you bought and sold your bitcoins, because the tax rate depends on how long you kept them, like for stocks.

To which we say no.
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June 17, 2014, 02:29:02 PM
 #40

bitcoin exchanges and other companies that convert between dollars and bitcoins are easily used for money laundering, bribing, financing terrorists, paying for drugs and child porn, bitcoin ponzis, internet gambling, etc.
Stop you there, bucko. Fiat has been used for all of those reasons, for centuries, and 24/7. How does dollars --> Bitcoin change that? I understand your point, but, really?
Because of all the bitcoin's "qualities" that are supposed to make it better than cash: it can be instantaneously transferred all over the world, address owners need not identify themselves,  transactions cannot be stopped or reversed, transactions happen in no particular country and hence under no particular jurisdiction, ...

These features of bitcoin are intentionally and explicitly meant to avoid the controls on money flow that governments have built into other payment methods over several decades, to fight all those crimes (and tax evasion too, BTW).

Obviously a site like SilkRoad could not work with cash or credit cards.   Need one say more?


Every form of currency will have benefits and drawbacks, and some people will use it for illicit activities. I think the pros outweigh the cons in the case of BTC. Can't say the same for fiat currencies though.

i was there when the internet started to depart. i thought it wasn´t a big deal. just the usual hype. i had no understanding what digitalization really meant. those geeks, you know. hype...

healthy slap in my ignorant face, i´d say.

i went back to university and studied modern history. one important branch of my studies was history of technology. and here the digital age was covered and it was right in one of those seminars when the astonishing impact of this transformation finally and fully hit me. what ever becomes digitalized changes completely the way we use it. communication and photography are good examples.

cryptocurrencies will change everything...

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