Finblog: E-gold diggers
June 9, 2007 by Mark
Filed under Personal Finance
This item was originally posted by Paul Penrose, in a Finextra Community Blog - Finblog 04/05/2007
Douglas Jackson, chairman and founder of digital cash enterprise e-gold, has mounted a spirited defense against an indictment charging e-gold Ltd., Gold & Silver Reserve, Inc., and the directors of both companies with money laundering, operating an unlicensed money transmitter business, and conspiracies to commit both offenses. Jackson, speaking on behalf of his fellow directors, vigorously denies the charges, taking particular – and convincing - exception to the allegations that either company ever turned a blind eye to payments for child pornography or for the sale of stolen identity and credit card information. His statement is posted on the e-gold Website here.
Libertarians suggest that the Secret Service investigation into e-gold is motivated less by the possibility that the system is being abused by fraudsters, than because of the competitive threat posed by gold and other precious metals to the US Government’s own monetary currency.
Grand conspiracies aside, there other questionable issues raised by the US government’s prosecution of this particular case.
In his statement, Jackson points out that search warrants issued by the law courts have resulted in the government helping itself to the financial records of hundreds of thousands of American citizens [plus citizens of virtually every other country] who had not been accused of any wrongdoing.
The threat to individual privacy and civil liberties is worth raising, since it seems unlikely that any scammers using e-gold would generously create a clean audit trail by managing their accounts under their own bona fides.
But the most troubling aspect of the affair is the implicit allegation on which the whole case hangs, in that because e-gold has been abused by scammers, the directors must be knowingly guilty of serious wrong-doing.
If this is the crux of the case against e-gold I suggest the Secret Service indicts every bank executive in America, since no bank, anywhere in the world, can convincingly argue that each and every one of its deposit accounts, without exception, is free from the taint of criminal activity.
Related Finextra story: E-Gold operators accused of money laundering
e-gold
webmoney
egold
pecunix














“If this is the crux of the case against e-gold I suggest the Secret Service indicts every bank executive in America, since no bank, anywhere in the world, can convincingly argue that each and every one of its deposit accounts, without exception, is free from the taint of criminal activity.”
What a ridiculous comparison. Banks are strictly regulated and are required to report suspicious activity to law enforcement. e-gold claims to cooperate with law enforcement, which is a load of crap.
E-gold’s MOTION TO VACATE SEIZURE WARRANT AND TO MODIFY RESTRAINING ORDER AND REQUEST FOR AN EVIDENTIARY HEARING
http://vertoro.com/00285665.html