Could this Letter Hold the Key to Satoshi's Wallet? A Letter form Marcel Mellish to Charlie Shrem

in #story8 years ago (edited)

The following story was written in late April 2014 by Marie-Lynn Richard with Charlie Shrem.

On January 27, 2014, Charlie Shrem was coming back from a conference in Amsterdam when he was arrested detained at JFK Airport. After his arraignment he received a curious letter postmarked in California signed Marcel Mellish which referenced his current situation. That was quick! The name didn't ring a bell. The letter looked batshit. Charlie posted it on his Facebook feed for a chuckle after his lawyer told him "It's the cost of being famous!" In essence it looked like the kind of letter the gatekeeper would throw out without ever showing the executive.

Dear Charlie

I returned last week from a 4 week razzia in Venice honoring Italian World War 2 Kamikaze pilots and learned of Bitcoin tsopujris during lunch with an old friend from our days as adecedarian defenestrators, Bishop Carl Bean.

I have read part of all of the news stories on the tismmes--and even saw the story on the Crime Channel  TV show last nigh.    I am not the least bit gruntled at the way those rantallion patzers are ballyragging you and Bobby Faiella..  If I had any balls I would put my head in a moose. I am so depressed at this situation that I felt the need for a little bit of cheering and rented the movie  "Schindler's List" to get some well needed yuks. 

You can read it here: http://charlieshrem.com/files/letter.txt

The formatting and integrity in this text file matches that of the letter itself. 

Here is a high quality scan of the letter: 


I started working with Charlie on March, when he posted that he needed help launching his website. I knew who Charlie was but hadn't really researched him in depth. As it turns out, my new job was to be a professional stalker because I, obviously, had to distill all of his accomplishments into a biographical website in record time so we could announce the acceptance of the highly anticipated Bitcoin documentary The Rise and Rise of Bitcoin to the TriBeca festival. Charlie is so accomplished and involved in the community that I haven't even finished his website yet. You see, I got distracted...


It was around that day that I saw the letter in his feed. Having spent a lot of time in rec.arts.celebrity.gossip back in the day, and having worked on Abilify disease learning campaigns for Brystol-Myers Squibb, I thought the letter was simply one of those crazy obsessive fan letters. One thing was sure, it was mind-bogglingly random. However, out of concern for Charlie's safety, I submitted it to my spouse who has worked in the field of personal protection for many years and is freaky fluent in body language and mind reading. Maybe he could help me read between the lines.


After we all realized that none of the information in the letter was real, it became obvious that it wasn't a crazy fan letter. People who suffer from delusions (in a clinical sense) usually have a very specific cause they want to advance. Or, perhaps they are in love with a celebrity. In both cases they want to be known, found and contacted. Marcel Mellish is unknown, impossible to find or contact, like Satoshi Nakamoto!

(Artwork by Marie Lynn Rirchard)


We spent 3 hours into the night discussing the peculiar letter trying to figure out an angle to decypher it. We made a list of ways to manipulate the information. Stephan is a math person, I am more of a word person, Very much a n00b at crypto. I proposed that we should simply ask ourselves: "What could it be if it was the greatest secret message ever?" Because it will be easier to unscramble such a huge set of clues if we know what to look for. When I wrote to Charlie about it, I told him we should suspect this is a key pair containing a gift of bitcoins. This is when Charlie explained to me the concept of a brain wallet, something I was not familiar with in the context of cryptocurrency. It made even more sense.


Charlie showed the letter to a few people in order to provide analysis and help in understanding what this could be. One of them is Vitalik Buterin, current developer of Ethereum. Vitalik was speaking at The Future of Money in New York City and seemed intrigued by the idea. Now that more than six people have seen the letter and agree that it looks suspiciously like an encrypted message.


Time to open it up to pool decryption!


Charlie has compiled the notes below from our crazy week of thinking outside the box. He shared them with his friend Hal Finney. This happened at a time where his family were receptive but Hal was not able to provide help given his deteriorating health.

-- Notes from Charlie


Some odd things:
Normally, I would discount this as merely being sent by a paranoid schizophrenic, however there are too many oddities and a few people are started dissecting and decoding it 


There are many double spaces, commas, and intentional misspellings. Words intentionally in Yiddish, that help the story, but spelled word. Oddities in the writing style, such as the last paragraph being justified while the others are not. The author proofread this, as he added a comma in pen on the last line, etc. 


Few, who I have shared this with have suggested an underlying message, possibly a private key, or someone reaching out. 


The letter was printed on yellow paper, when trying to do optical character recognition I found my computer unable to recognize even one letter or number, however simply changing it to grayscale I was able to recognize every letter and number. That leads me to believe the author did not want this being read by any automated USPS systems that scan letters.


1. The punctuation (,, .. ----- etc.)

2. The numbers

3. The capital letters

4. The justification (first paragraphs are not, last one is) Separate the key from the password?

5. The misspelled Yiddish-ish words (including in the return address ‘Gonif’ which mentions a thief!)

6. The old-timey words from 1920's Americana like quidnucs (someone who knows the latest gossip), Jewishprudence (case law)

7. The curious itemizations of places (i.e. there is no such thing as a Licensed Lava Lamp repair shop (LLL)Maybe draw those on a Google map.

8. The three physics courses. In Truecrypt I encrypt with three passes, the three classes make up acronyms POI, VGLMS, GACM

9. The quote, it is not encapsulated correctly, this is a person who write well and knows this. Why extra punctuation? No more room? See #1

10. We had a theory that turns this into a QR code. This needs to be explored.

11. I no longer have the envelope.

-----

After we started pondering this odd letter, other work took over our brain space. And then Charlie had his trial and then his sentence to contend with. Throughout the last year, the odd letter didn’t factor in my communications with Charlie in prison. But it was always Charlie’s goal to publish this to the whole crypto community.


So here we are.

My take on this as a non-cryptographer: This has to be SUPER evident in order to prevent mistakes in long keys. OR, the sender is familiar with Charlie’s high-level technical abilities and expects him to webscrape or API to a site like http://brainwallet.org. But my money is on ‘So simple that it will make us feel stupid that we didn't see it right away!!


So Steem community, we’ve given ourselves a headache over this, now it’s your turn to use your brilliance and make us FACEPALM so hard that we we fall backwards!


Marie-Lynn and Charlie with help from Stephane Beaudin

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I returned last week from a 4 week razzia in Venice honoring Italian World War 2 Kamikaze pilots and learned of Bitcoin tsopujris during lunch with an old friend from our days as adecedarian defenestrators, Bishop Carl Bean.

Razzia = plunder for slaves to be sold in the market. Could be applied to Jews arrested and sent to concentration camps.

Italian World war 2 kamikaze = no such thing existed historically

Tsopujris = misspelling for Tsouris, Yiddish word meaning troubles

Adecedarian = misspelling for abecedarian, which means beginner

Carl Bean = Carl Bean is the founding prelate of the Unity Fellowship Church Movement, a liberal protestant denomination that is particularly welcoming of lesbian, gay and bisexual African Americans.

At this point I am lost

Perhaps the private key includes the misspelled letter in the words tsopujris and adecedarian i. e. P,J,D

why not asking the solution of this riddle to Nick Szabo? After all he has a Jewish last name and is believed by many to be satoshi nakamoto.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nick_Szabo

You can tweet @ him with the link. I do not know him personally.

My favorite part is the list of business concepts that don't seem to exist like the lava lamp thing. I remember looking up some of this and it pointed to a building 1 block from Charlie's bar EVR. Don't have those links anymore.

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Sound like someone trying to hide a message for himself in plain sight.

Imagine Satoshi wanting to keep one or more of his private addresses very secret. Maybe using something like a brain wallet. He was pretty good at statistics and as such he knew that the amount of words needed was going to be rather long and complex. Maybe with a misspelling or two.

How to hold on to this for decades if you know you will go to other parts of the world and you suspect the police will get involved?

Simple, write a letter to a public figure so crazy and yet so smart it will get stored on the internet for live.

I would suggest he knows the trick and remembers it, and on top of that remembers one or two more words that are needed to complete the puzzle but are not written down anywhere.

"I have read part of all of the news stories on the tismmes"

This sounds like a reference to Bitcoin's Genesis Block, which includes the headline from a news story in the Times on 3rd Jan 2009: "Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks".

Good catch. "the tismmes" very likely refers to "The Times".

Sorry to disappoint you, but no private keys are hidden here :(
It is just some sort of a simple code using first letters after double space, first part to be read as follows:
"If I had (or "I have") all last VPNs"

  • From the mistaken Yiddish words he forms a sentence: "Thief troubles begins"
  • "It's too late for Chiropody--the vultures are already circling:---- (and there it is "-- ----" = "24" (hours)) to:
  • call this street phone in CA "(310) 939-4827"
  • He just waited there on 1/30/14 (the letter is posted few days before)
  • @liondani is right, Marcel Mellish triggers "marshmallow" (probably with fire)

It was just a ransom letter from an ex military gamble addict....
P.s. Last known address for Caesar Kimmel is in a small French village (probably just waiting the end of the world :D), the letter is written in this house: http://on.trulia.com/2bMGKlM
P.s.s.: I am sure there was some additional info under the stamps too ;)

Cheers

pump, I think you have the best guess so far. Also it's simple.
It is statistically improbable that letters after double spaces would form an intelligible phrase like that.
There is no reason for anybody to send Charlie a secret message that specifically mentions Bitcoin if there is no other things at the end of the string. Doesn't mean that this is the only string though.

in the original letter there is a difference:
"If i had*, AI of (or a(n) IO) VPPs"
-VPP= Vector Packet Processing
-the number "8" in [s] "Ru8tgers" could be intentional (because of the hand added comma, or just a u+8 tupo)

  • (double dots = you get two spaces (3 words) after the dots)

Your explanation doesn't match your demonstration. You are taking arbitrary single letters, multiple letters or whole words (haven't explained the rational about doing that). You are cutting words in two and taking a letter inside list "most" or "tray-bearing" etc. Again no explanation. With arbitrary rules, I too can make that text say anything of my liking. Please explain your reasoning.

Double spaces in the OCR version don't seem to match the double spaces in the scanned image, I am getting tiiamiuopp, way less interesting.

As a former psych nurse this looks more like someone trying to send a message rather than a crazed fan or a schizophrenic. The content is way too structured from what I have experienced on the psych unit.

Yes hilarski. That is why it's not in the bin and invading our head two and a half years on! Maybe it's a virus. It will make the pondered of the letter lose their mind :)

Charlie, you may want to scrub the address a bit better on the high-resolution image.

Anyhow, this is very intriguing and it does seem like something John Nash would like to crack if he was still alive. If I decypher this -- I give you my word to split the bitcoins 50/50 :)

I have purged the cache so the best blank out shows up. Thanks for the heads up fulltimegeek.

Thanks for the heads up fulltimegeek.

Spreading info and truth is what I do!

Cool sharing about a very secretive story, thanks a bunch, namaste :)

I really don't understand what is trying to be done here?

People are trying to decipher Satoshi Nakamoto's holdings to one of his wallets by deciphering a brainkey?

If that is true? Why would anyone want to steal his funds legitimately? Surely Satoshi deserves to own his wealth?

Or if I have this wrong, please explain. I feel clouded here.

The assumption that this is a brain wallet could be wrong. It could be a ROT13 type thing and say something outright without being related to financial stuff.

Assuming it's a brain wallet gives us a list of techniques to crack it.
Assuming it's a QR-Code gives us another list of techniques to break it.
Assuming it's a love letter written to Charlie by Wynona Ryder would give us another list of things to try out.

It could be ANYTHING. All we know is that it is not what it is trying to portray it is (a typical note from a paranoid schizophrenic delivered to a celebrity).

There is a reason I got this letter, just trying to figure it out.

His brilliance new that you will end up on a steem like blockchain!

To address the Satoshi wealth aspect of your question: We are assuming this is a secret message. Of all the crypto friends Charlie has the most secret is Satoshi Nakamoto. A little later Newsweek propped up Dorian Satoshi as the likely Nakamoto. He's in California. No cigar. At the same time fake Satoshi Nakamoto props up on Twitter. Uses same kinds of words in his bio (i.e. Pasquinade. He changes it regularly by the way). None of this helps elucidate the letter. Since then Craig Wright, seemingly a prankster, comes along. He is something else. Could he have pranked Charlie? He's not in California though.

Also, bear in mind that people were told ahead of time that Charlie would be arrested because there was press at JFK when he came home from Amsterdam. The letter seems to have been typed in 1 minute and mailed right then and there for it to show up magically in Brooklyn so fast... Or it was written with much advance knowledge of Charlie's unexpected arrest. It's really weird.

Is Charlie's address the only thing in the letter that is real? If so, could it be the key to deciphering the letter?

Charlie's address IS the only thing in the address that is real. I will let @charlieshrem get around to your comment and follow-up.

This is what I was wondering as well @marielynn. That may be part of the key, or perhaps the letter in its entirety including @charlieshrem's address yielded an interesting hash... not sure, but I wonder if this is solvable without that piece of the puzzle. Fascinating letter. It's got the gears turning in my head! Thank you for sharing it!

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