More than 14 months after his arrest, Ross Ulbricht has been convicted of being the Dread Pirate Roberts, the masked figure who ran the Silk Road's unprecedented online supermarket for drugs. But the man who first created that mask---and in many ways served as Silk Road's mastermind just as much as Ulbricht---remains a mysterious figure, and one who by all appearances walked away unscathed from his involvement in the Silk Road's billion-dollar drug operation.
As Ulbricht's trial unfolded over the last month, one character appeared again and again in the chat logs prosecutors pulled from the laptop seized from Ulbricht at the time of his arrest: a man calling himself Variety Jones, and later, Cimon.
In the past year and a half U.S. law enforcement have arrested Ulbricht, three of his Silk Road staffers and even the administrator of a second Silk Road, but no law enforcement agency has publicly recorded capturing anyone using Jones' pseudonyms. Yet based on Ulbricht's chat logs and secret journal, Jones served as nothing less than Ulbricht's "mentor," advising the Dread Pirate Roberts closely on everything from managing the site's dealers to hiding his money offshore to threatening enemies with real-world violence.
"[He] was the biggest and strongest willed character I had met through the site thus far," Ulbricht wrote in a 2011 journal entry.
To the average Silk Road user, Variety Jones was just a high-volume marijuana seed dealer, who took great pains to please his customers and ship his product the same day as their order. But behind the scenes, Jones may have had some sort of ownership, partnership or investment in the Silk Road. He's not included in the list of salaried staffers found in Ulbricht's accounting files. Yet over the anonymous and encrypted instant messaging system Torchat, he discussed with Ulbricht every inside detail of the market, from the site's sales statistics to its org chart of employees.
When Ulbricht told Jones that he had revealed his Silk Road secret to both a programmer friend and to his ex-girlfriend, it was Jones who came up with Ulbricht's Dread Pirate Roberts nickname. Ulbricht couldn't even remember exactly what role the Dread Pirate Roberts had played in the film The Princess Bride. Jones explained that the Dread Pirate was a handle passed down from person to person, the perfect cover story for creating the illusion that Ulbricht had handed off ownership of the Silk Road if he were ever caught.