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43 sats \ 21 replies \ @ek 13 Dec \ on: First Tax Evasion Conviction In The U.S. For Bitcoin: Two Years In Prison Politics_And_Law
I wonder how tax evasion is viewed by inmates
My understanding of the US prison system is that nonviolent "criminals" tend to be put with each other, so he'll likely be in a minimum security prison with other tax evaders or embezzlers.
(I'm guessing @siggy47 would have a lot more insight here.)
Is it like a show and tell?
Do they tell each other their crimes?
I have never been in prison so l dont know....
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I would think so. I also heard stories of some knowing they won't survive prison if inmates find out what they did. Criminals also have lines they don't cross.
I also think if you don't tell them your crime, they'll just assume the worst or have other ways to find out.
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Most of my knowledge is from Darknet Diaries, lol
I think the Gollumfun episodes mentioned some details about prison life but not sure
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I don't think he gets internet. He sometimes dictates tweets to his mom who posts them on his behalf.
You would not be off to a good start i think. But character matters more than your conviction in the end
not bitcoiners
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what !?
inmate noun [ C ] uk /ˈɪn.meɪt/ us /ˈɪn.meɪt/a person who is kept in a prison or a hospital for people who are mentally ill
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If you scroll down, you'll see the definition that @ek was using, which is for prisoners.
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he'll be in a camp playing tennis every day and getting blown by chomos
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