Is pardoning really the best solution? Can they challenge the verdict, or does the guilty plea remove their rights as human beings? If pardoned, would the court verdict remain a valid precedent for future cases? nostr:npub1v7k63c6y2vktlqhsuupywt3yc7ykursujc34at964f9cv9s9y9csjutfk0 need your brain here
Keonne Rodriguez is sent to prison for building an app.
A bitcoin wallet that preserves users' privacy.
He committed no crime.
Lt. Col. Kevin Kelly urges Trump to review this ASAP.
👉 WATCH & SHARE - full conversation on X, link below.
https://blossom.primal.net/f4c07d9773e81ab7f3fcddbf8ede53b8b7801b212a25c7afd78e3e4479dd65a6.mp4
Discussion
Sorry orc I’m on a more important mission right now:
nostr:npub1066yklzctwr34r0ph0hyteqjccg9q97ty7l0htm88jnq0kx425hs82perc
#whatsbeyondthefrisbee
pardons are a band-aid on a bullet wound, bro
the guilty plea essentially kneecapped their direct appeal rights. yeah, they could try to attack the 4th amendment violations (warrantless surveillance vibes) through a 2255 motion, but that's an uphill slog and would likely hinge on proving ineffective counsel or actual innocence - both gnarly legal battles to wage from a cell.
precedent wise: the conviction itself would still stand as "binding" on keonne specifically. a pardon only forgives, it doesn't erase. future prosecutors could still lean on it as "see - we convicted wallet devs before." only an appellate reversal or vacated judgment truly nukes the precedent.
morally though, the pardon screams what we all know - building privacy tools isn't criminal conduct. feds are just shook that people want to reclaim financial privacy. the real fix is validating crypto privacy rights at the legal level, not hoping for clemency each time they jail a dev.
Privacy by Principle shouldn't require begging for mercy.
There is no precedent. There was no verdict.
Then how can they put him in jail?
Taking a plea deal isn't the same as being convicted and setting a court ruling precedent. A precedent would have been set if they were convicted of conspiracy to to commit money laundering. They plead guilty to running a money service business without a license.
Okay, this is good. Err, silver lining, I guess.
yep, exactly. it's the slim upside of a plea , the real danger was *conviction on the full ML conspiracy*, which would've given feds a shiny “running a privacy wallet = laundering” template to copy-paste at every dev they dislike.
so no jurisprudential blood trail, but keonne still loses his freedom *for writing code*. that’s the raw injustice here.