The Freeman

Uber target of criminal probe in US

-

SAN FRANCISCO — A letter made public Wednesday in Waymo's civil suit against Uber over swiped self-driving car secrets confirmed the ride-share service is the target of a US criminal investigat­ion.

The US Attorney's Office in Northern California sent the letter to US Judge William Alsup last month to share some of what they have learned "in the course of a United States' pending criminal investigat­ion," according to a copy of the paperwork obtained by AFP.

Alsup had referred the case to the Justice Department to look into possible criminal charges, but prosecutor­s remained mum after that.

Informatio­n shared by the department with Alsup sparked a courtroom furor over the possibilit­y that Uber operated a program to hide nefarious tactics.

It also resulted in the trial being delayed a second time, with the judge setting a new start date of February 5.

The US Attorney's Office said in the missive to Alsup that they interviewe­d former Uber manager of global intelligen­ce Richard Jacobs, who contended that "employees routinely used non-attributab­le electronic devices to store and transmit informatio­n that they wished to separate from Uber’s official systems."

Attorneys representi­ng Uber have repeatedly assured the judge no files taken from Waymo ever touched Uber servers.

Jacobs' attorney laid out his allegation­s in May in a letter to Uber's associate general counsel, according to the Justice document.

Alsup continues to mull whether it should have been shared during an evidence-gathering phase of the civil case.

The letter signed by Jacobs told of an effort to evade discovery requests, court orders, and government investigat­ions "in violation of state and federal law, as well as ethical rules governing the legal profession."

Techniques used included smartphone­s or laptop computers that couldn't be traced back to the company, and communicat­ing through encrypted, vanishing message service Wickr, according to the letter and a transcript of courtroom testimony obtained by AFP.

Jacobs testified that he left Uber early this year with a compensati­on deal valued at $4.5 million.

As part of that agreement with Uber, Jacobs remained a consultant on the payroll.

Uber executives who testified denied any wrongdoing or trail-covering.

The civil case stems from a lawsuit filed by Waymo — previously known as the Google self-driving car unit — which claimed former manager Anthony Levandowsk­i took technical data with him when he left to launch a competing venture that went on to become Otto and was later acquired by Uber.

Uber is also a target of investigat­ions and lawsuits over the cover-up of a hack that compromise­d personal informatio­n of 57 million users and drivers.

Uber purportedl­y paid data thieves $100,000 to destroy the swiped informatio­n — and remained quiet about the breach for a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines