John McAfee: antivirus entrepreneur found dead in
Spanish prison
McAfee’s extradition to the US on tax charges had been
approved hours earlier
John McAfee, co-founder of McAfee Crypto Team
Sam Jones
in Madrid, Kari Paul in San Francisco and agencies
Wed 23 Jun
2021 23.39 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jun/23/john-mcafee-dead-spain-prison-extradition
The
antivirus software entrepreneur John McAfee has been found dead in his cell in
Spain from an apparent suicide, hours after the country’s highest court
approved his extradition to the United States, where he was wanted on
tax-related criminal charges that carry a prison sentence of up to 30 years.
Catalan’s
regional police force, the Mossos d’Esquadra, confirmed a report in El País
that McAfee, 75, had been found dead in the Brians 2 prison near Barcelona,
late on Wednesday.
In a
statement, the Catalan justice department said that prison officers and medics
had tried to save the life of a 75-year-old man but had been unsuccessful.
“Judicial
staff have been dispatched to the prison and are investigating the causes of
death,” the statement said, adding: “Everything points to death by suicide.”
McAfee’s
lawyer told the Reuters news agency on Wednesday evening that McAfee had
apparently hanged himself in his prison cell.
Tax
offenses
McAfee, the
creator of the McAfee virus software, was arrested last October at Barcelona’s
international airport as he was about to board a flight to Istanbul.
The arrest
of the entrepreneur came a day after authorities had made public a US
indictment stemming from alleged tax offenses. Tennessee prosecutors had
charged McAfee with evading taxes after failing to report income made from
promoting cryptocurrencies while he did consultancy work, as well as income
from speaking engagements and selling the rights to his life story for a
documentary.
On
Wednesday, Spain’s highest court had approved McAfee’s extradition to the
United States, although the decision could be appealed and the extradition
would have had to be approved by the Spanish cabinet.
“The court
agrees to grant the extradition of John David McAfee as requested by the
American judicial authorities for the crimes referred to in the tax offense indictments
for years 2016 to 2018,” read the 16-page ruling.
Erratic
behavior
Since
making a fortune in the 1980s with the software that still bears his name,
McAfee had engaged in increasingly erratic behavior, most recently as a
self-styled cryptocurrency guru claiming to make $2,000 a day.
His
namesake company ultimately became a household entity in antivirus security,
but tried to distance itself from its controversial founder after he resigned
in 1994.
McAfee was
purchased by the computer chip maker Intel in 2010 for $7.7bn and was folded
into Intel’s larger cybersecurity division. The rebranding was short-lived, and
Intel in 2016 spun out the cybersecurity unit into a new company called McAfee.
McAfee’s
personal life often drew as much interest as his professional achievements. He
twice made long-shot runs for the US presidency and was a participant in
Libertarian party presidential debates in 2016. He dabbled in yoga, ultra-light
aircraft and producing herbal medications.
He
frequently touted conspiracy theories on social media, and became the subject
of frenzied media scrutiny following the unsolved 2012 murder of a neighbor in
Belize.
When the
police found him living with a 17-year-old girl and discovered a large arsenal
of weapons in his home in the Central American country, McAfee disappeared on a
month-long flight that drew breathless media coverage. McAfee said he knew nothing
about the murder, but was worried he might have been the attacker’s intended
target.
The dead
neighbor’s family later filed a wrongful death suit against McAfee and last
year a court in Florida ruled against him, ordering him to pay the family more
than $25m.
In 2015,
McAfee was arrested in the US for driving under the influence and possession of
a gun while under the influence.
In July
2019, he was released from detention in the Dominican Republic after he and
five others were suspected of traveling on a yacht carrying high-calibre
weapons, ammunition and military-style gear, officials in the Caribbean island
said at the time.
In March,
he was charged in a Manhattan federal court over a pump and dump scheme
involving cryptocurrencies he was promoting to his large social media
following.
In a
hearing held via video link earlier this month in Spain, McAfee had argued that
the charges against him were politically motivated and said he would spend the
rest of his life in prison if he was returned to the US.
In an
interview with British newspaper the Independent, McAfee said his experience of
being in a Spanish prison was a “fascinating adventure” and he planned never to
return to the US.
His main
point of contact outside the prison, McAfee said, was his wife, Janice. The
last post from his Twitter account was a retweet of a Father’s Day message from
her.
“These
eight months John has spent in prison in Spain have been especially hard on his
overall health both mentally and physically, as well as financially, but he is
undeterred from continuing to speak truth to power,” it said.
Conspiracy
theorists have already seized on McAfee’s death, editing his Wikipedia page to
state he was murdered. McAfee’s apparent suicide comes after he shared tweets
about the poor conditions in prison, stating “there is much sorrow in prison,
disguised as hostility”.
Hours after
his death, a post featuring the letter Q was shared to McAfee’s Instagram
account. The image is probably a reference to QAnon – the baseless conspiracy
theory that there exists a secret world order of satanic pedophiles being
battled in secret by Donald Trump.
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