🍕 Bitcoin Pizza Day is Almost Here!
Join the celebration on Gate Post with the hashtag #Bitcoin Pizza Day# to share a $500 prize pool and win exclusive merch!
📅 Event Duration:
May 16, 2025, 8:00 AM – May 23, 2025, 06:00 PM UTC
🎯 How to Participate:
Post on Gate Post with the hashtag #Bitcoin Pizza Day# during the event. Your content can be anything BTC-related — here are some ideas:
🔹 Commemorative:
Look back on the iconic “10,000 BTC for two pizzas” story or share your own memories with BTC.
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Discuss BTC trading experiences, market views, or show off your contract gai
Feds Know Satoshi? Lawsuit Demands DHS Release Hidden Bitcoin Founder's Interview
A high-stakes lawsuit demands the U.S. government release buried documents revealing bitcoin’s true creators, after claims of a secret DHS interview with Satoshi Nakamoto.
Satoshi Nakamoto Unmasked? DHS Accused of Hiding Explosive Bitcoin Founder’s Interview
Attorney James Murphy has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia demanding that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) release documents revealing what the agency knows about the identity of bitcoin’s elusive creator, Satoshi Nakamoto. Murphy initiated the action on April 7, after DHS failed to respond to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request he submitted on Feb. 12.
The request stemmed from a 2019 public presentation during which DHS Special Agent Rana Saoud declared that her agency had interviewed Satoshi. The complaint states:
Murphy, an attorney who publishes digital asset legal analysis on social media platform X under the handle @MetaLawMan, argues the public deserves access to this information, especially amid rising governmental interest in bitcoin.
The lawsuit outlines Saoud’s comments at the OffshoreAlert Conference North America, where she described a DHS mission to California that led to an in-person interview with four individuals involved in bitcoin’s creation. The lawsuit states that Saoud recounted how agents traveled to California and discovered that Satoshi Nakamoto was not the sole creator of bitcoin. Saoud was quoted as saying:
Despite this claim, the Department of Homeland Security has not released interview transcripts, recordings, or internal communications related to the meeting.
Murphy stressed the broader implications of DHS’s secrecy, especially in light of recent government initiatives involving bitcoin. He emphasized:
His FOIA request and lawsuit come amid growing interest in bitcoin as a reserve asset by public institutions. The U.S. Senate is considering legislation to create a bitcoin reserve managed by the U.S. Treasury while approximately 20 states are weighing bills to allow public funds to be invested in bitcoin. The lawyer also cites broader adoption by public and private companies, as well as an executive order from President Donald Trump establishing a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, to argue that transparency is critical. With the Department of Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement yet to release any records or confirm processing of his request, Murphy is asking the court to compel a response.