Houston Chronicle

Federal judge’s order adds to Uber’s mounting problems

- By Tom Krisher and Michael Liedtke

SAN FRANCISCO — A rare order from a federal judge alerting prosecutor­s to possible criminal misconduct by Uber or a key executive deepens the turmoil swirling around the ride-hailing company at a time when it’s grappling with other legal and image problems.

District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco referred a civil case filed against Uber by Waymo to the U.S. Attorney’s Office “for investigat­ion of possible theft of trade secrets.” It threatens to trigger a second U.S. government investigat­ion of a company that has pushed the legal boundaries through most of its eight-year history.

At stake is Uber’s estimated $68 billion valuation, a possible public stock offering and the future of its selfdrivin­g car program, which its CEO has said is the key to the company’s future.

Waymo, a self-driving car company owned by Google parent Alphabet, sued Uber in February alleging that Uber is using stolen self-driving technology to build its own fleet of autonomous cars.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Francisco didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Experts say prosecutor­s are likely to follow up on Alsup’s order and launch an investigat­ion. The probe, combined with other legal and image woes, will reduce Uber’s value and in the worst case could threaten the San Francisco company’s existence if investors leave, criminal charges bring huge fines and legal action stalls autonomous car research, the experts say.

Uber wouldn’t comment Friday on a possible criminal probe. Federal prosecutor­s already have requested informatio­n from at least two cities about use of phony software to thwart city officials looking at whether Uber was following local regulation­s.

Alsup wrote in his order that he wasn’t taking a position on whether prosecutio­n was warranted.

Alsup, 71, has gained a reputation as a no-nonsense judge since he was appointed to the bench in 1999 by President Bill Clinton. The Harvard Law graduate has experience in trials involving high-profile technology companies, including a 2012 patent and copyright infringeme­nt case pitting Oracle against Google.

For a judge to take such a public step, he must have more than just a whiff of criminal activity, legal experts say. Prosecutor­s get many tips, but rarely do they come from a judge who is familiar with evidence and the legal elements of what is a crime.

“This is not some private informant that slipped an envelope under the door at midnight. This is public, and it’s a judge,” said Erik Gordon, a law and business professor at the University of Michigan.

An investigat­ion would siphon executive resources at Uber just as CEO Travis Kalanick faces many other challenges, said John Coffee, a Columbia University law professor who specialize­s in white-collar crime and corporate governance. “The possibilit­y that you could get criminally indicted would be exactly the wrong thing for Uber,” Coffee said.

In addition to the apparent inquiry into the software called “Greyball” to impede city inspectors, Uber still has to deal with Waymo’s high-stakes espionage lawsuit. It alleges that Uber is using trade secrets stolen by a former Google engineer, Anthony Levandowsk­i, who formed his own company that was bought by Uber for $680 million.

After that deal, Levandowsk­i began to oversee Uber’s self-driving car division.

Waymo contends that before leaving Google early last year, Levandowsk­i downloaded 14,000 documents with details of a navigation­al tool called Lidar that robotic cars need to see what’s around them.

Uber has vehemently denied using Waymo’s ideas, maintainin­g that its Lidar is radically different. Levandowsk­i recently agreed to step down as Uber’s top self-driving car executive, though he still works at the company.

 ?? Eric Risberg / Associated Press file ?? Anthony Levandowsk­i left Google in 2016 and now works for Uber.
Eric Risberg / Associated Press file Anthony Levandowsk­i left Google in 2016 and now works for Uber.

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