Bitcoin Blitzes Beyond $1,150, Prices Up 8% in April
bitcoin prices scaled above $1,150 on Tuesday, reaching a high of $1,162 on the Bitstamp Price Index (BPI) to continue a strong start to the month.
bitcoin prices are firmly on the rebound in April as prices continue an upward climb since the turn after March. At the start of the month, bitcoin was trading at $1,069 and the gains made toward today’s high represents a near 9% climb in value this month.
On Monday, prices soared but recent volatility leaves little room for speculation of support at that level. Prices have, so far, stayed above the milestone.
// Read exclusive stories, bitcoin analysis, and tutorials. Use the coupon code “CCN5” and get $5 off. Join now. //
Trading showed a bullish sign during the late hours of Monday when price scaled above $1,150 at 22:00 (UTC). Trading on Tuesday began below the figure through most of the morning before price spiked at 08:00. Three hours later, price reached a new high of $1,162 before midday.
At the time of publishing, prices have trailed off a tad toward $1,135.
Market activity data from CoinMarketCap shows significant trading volumes in the XRP/BTC and the ETH/BTC trading pairs, with nearly $140 million in volume traded from the altcoins to bitcoin.
The sell-off of Ripple tokens (XRP) coincides with a notable drop-off of Ripple’s value, a possible correction after toward the end of March.
XRP/BTC trading chart from Poloniex.
The world’s most prominent cryptocurrency is now trading at the peaks of the long-term all-time high set in November 2013 when the cryptocurrency scaled $1,163 on Bitstamp. That peak remained uncharted for over three years before bitcoin made rampant gains in the lead-up to the SEC decision of the Winklevoss twins’ ETF, on February 23 this year.
While there are no notable real-world developments that correlate to bitcoin price gains this week, it appears that talk of a hard fork of the cryptocurrency’s core software is no longer concerning investors who are turning to bitcoin once again. Prices were notably affected in mid-April, falling below $1,000 as investors engaged in a with fears of bitcoin being split into two rival coins.
For a live BTC Price chart, click .
All time references are in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Image from Shutterstock. Charts from bitcoin Wisdom.
After darknet market on July 4, many of its users migrated to Hansa Market — and played right into the hands of an “Operation Bayonet,” a coordinated international law enforcement action. Today, both the and the published press releases stating that Hansa Market has also been shut down.
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the action was led by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), with law enforcement authorities in Thailand, the Netherlands, Lithuania, Canada, the United Kingdom, France and the Europol participating in the operation. Bayonet’s focus was takedown of both Hansa Market and AlphaBay in the course of the same multi-agency investigation.
“This is an outstanding success by authorities in Europe and the U.S. The capability of drug traffickers and other serious criminals around the world has taken a serious hit today after a highly sophisticated joint action in multiple countries. By acting together on a global basis the law enforcement community has sent a clear message that we have the means to identify criminality and strike back, even in areas of the Dark Web. There are more of these operations to come,” Rob Wainwright, the executive director of Europol, said today at a joint press conference with the U.S. Attorney General, the acting FBI director and the deputy director of the DEA in Washington, D.C.
According to Europol’s press release, the European agency provided Dutch authorities with an investigation lead on the Hansa Market in 2016. Europol allegedly acquired the information with the help of Bitdefender, an internet security company advising Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3). Investigators managed to locate the infrastructure of the darknet marketplace in the Netherlands, which resulted in the arrest of two administrators of the site in Germany. Hansa’s servers were seized in the Netherlands, Germany and Lithuania.
Furthermore, Dutch law enforcement acquired information on “high value targets and delivery addresses for a large number of orders.” With the help of Europol, the Dutch National Police collected information on approximately 10,000 foreign addresses of Hansa Market customers. In a covert action, Dutch law enforcement took control of Hansa a month ago, allowing investigators to monitor and gain information on the users of the marketplace without their knowledge.
Casting a Wider Net
It seems authorities planned their actions carefully since Hansa was already under their control when AlphaBay went offline on July 4. Europol stated that the Dutch National Police “could identify and disrupt the regular criminal activity on Hansa but then also sweep up all those new users displaced from AlphaBay who were looking for a new trading platform.”
“The Dutch National Police have located Hansa Market and taken over control of this marketplace since June 20, 2017. We have modified the source code, which allowed us to capture passwords, PGP-encrypted order information, IP-Addresses, Bitcoins and other relevant information that may help law enforcement agencies worldwide to identify users of this marketplace. For more information about this operation, please consult our hidden service at ,” Dutch authorities wrote on the seized Hansa website.
In total, 38,000 transactions were identified by Europol, who then alerted other agencies in 600 cases. Furthermore, Europol stated they have prepared “intelligence packages” to be sent out to “law enforcement partners across 37 countries, spawning many follow-up investigations across Europe and beyond.”
AlphaBay went offline on July 4. At the time, many users suspected it was an exit scam. Authorities the arrest of the Alexandre Cazes, 26, the alleged administrator of the website, who was later found dead in his cell in Thailand. On the day of Cazes’s arrest, law enforcement took down servers of the dark web marketplace in Canada, the Netherlands and Thailand.
Darknet marketplaces have generated massive police heat after dangerous synthetic drugs, such as fentanyl — the substance at the heart of drug epidemics in multiple countries, including Canada and the United States — were constantly offered for sale on the websites. The of U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions during the joint press release in Washington, D.C., confirm this assumption.
“Among other challenges, our great country is currently in the midst of the deadliest drug crisis in our history. One American now dies of a drug overdose every 11 minutes and more than 2 million Americans are addicted to prescription painkillers. Every day, as a result of drug abuse, American families are being bankrupted, friendships broken and promising lives cut short,” he said.
“As of earlier this year, 122 vendors advertised fentanyl and 238 advertised heroin, and we know of several Americans who were killed by drugs sold on AlphaBay.”
Sessions asserted that his department’s work is not yet finished and issued a warning to people still ready to engage in illegal activity on the dark web. “We will continue to find, arrest, prosecute, convict and incarcerate criminals, drug traffickers and their enablers, wherever they are. The dark net is not a place to hide. We will use every tool we have to stop criminals from exploiting vulnerable people and sending so many Americans to an early grave.”
bitcoin Price Will Hit $1 Million in 2020 Because Maths, Stupid: John McAfee Get Exclusive Analysis and Investing Ideas of Future Assets on Hacked.com. Join the community today and get up to $400 in discount […]