Keonne Rodriguez, a co-founder of the Bitcoin privacy tool Samourai Wallet, began serving a five-year sentence and wrote a letter from inside a US federal prison on Christmas Eve.
The letter, shared publicly, offers a short, personal account of intake procedures, the move into housing, and his first days behind bars. He wrote that the place was “confusing and unnatural”, yet “manageable”, and that fellow inmates had treated him with respect.
Rodriguez wrote that he had gone through searches and medical checks during intake, and that he was settling in after what he called an emotional goodbye to family days before the holiday.
The note was dated Christmas Eve and marked his seventh day at the facility. Reports said his wife was scheduled as his first visitor on Christmas Day. Those details make the timing — and the human side of the story — hard to miss.
Rodriguez was sentenced on Nov. 19 on charges tied to his role in a crypto mixing protocol. His case has become a touchpoint for a wider dispute about whether building or maintaining privacy software can carry criminal liability when others misuse those tools.
The debate has drawn comparisons to the prosecution of Roman Storm, a co-founder of Tornado Cash, and raised questions about how the law treats open-source code and the people who write it.
Supporters say Rodriguez’s prosecution threatens free speech and software development. A petition asking for clemency gathered more than 12,000 signatures, and many privacy advocates argue that no direct victims were harmed by his work.
In public posts, Rodriguez framed his case as “lawfare” and criticized regulators and judges for targeting innovation. Those claims have been repeated widely in crypto circles.
Prosecutors argue differently. They point to the structure and promotion of certain tools and say some actors used them to hide illicit transfers.
Courts have faced the hard question of where to draw the line between code as neutral technology and code used to facilitate crime. That tension is central to why Rodriguez’s sentence has drawn such attention from developers, legal scholars, and privacy groups.
Samourai Drama: Calls For Clemency Gain TractionUS President Donald Trump said on Dec. 16 that he would “take a look” at Rodriguez’s case after it gained public attention. That brief remark kept the possibility of executive clemency in public view, though such reviews do not always lead to action. Rodriguez publicly appealed to the president for a pardon as he began serving his sentence.
Public reaction has been mixed. Some see the petition and media coverage as a push to protect open-source developers. Others stress that courts will weigh evidence about intent and conduct, not just the code itself.
What remains clear is that this case has pulled the issue into the open and made it harder for lawmakers and courts to ignore.
Featured image from Cyber Security News, chart from TradingView


