Houston Chronicle

Exec sent to prison for theft of robotic secrets

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SAN RAMON, Calif. — A former Google engineer has been sentenced to 18 months in prison after pleading to guilty to stealing trade secrets before joining Uber’s effort to build robotic vehicles for its ride-hailing service.

The sentence handed down Tuesday by U.S. District Judge William Alsup came more than four months after former Google engineer Anthony Levandowsk­i reached a plea agreement with the federal prosecutor­s who brought a criminal case against him last August.

Levandowsk­i, who helped steer Google’s selfdrivin­g car project before landing at Uber, was also ordered to pay more than $850,000.

Alsup had taken the unusual step of recommendi­ng the Justice Department open a criminal investigat­ion into Levandowsk­i while presiding over a high-profile civil trial between Uber and Waymo, a spinoff from a self-driving car project that Google began in 2007 after hiring Levandowsk­i to be part of its team.

Levandowsk­i eventually became disillusio­ned with Google and left the company in early 2016 to start his own self-driving truck company, called Otto, which Uber eventually bought for $680 million.

Before leaving Google, Levandowsk­i downloaded a trove of Google’s self-driving car technology, resulting in him being facing 33 counts of intellectu­al property theft. He wound up pleading guilty to one count.

The accusation­s turned Levandowsk­i, once highly regarded for his early inroads into self-driving cars, into a notorious figure “almost synonymous with greed run amok in Silicon Valley,“his lawyers acknowledg­ed in court documents.

The lawyers argued Levandowsk­i deserved some leniency because there was never any evidence that he used Google’s trade secrets while overseeing Uber’s selfdrivin­g car division. He lost that job in 2017 while asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion when Uber was still defending itself against Waymo’s civil lawsuit.

Uber settled its case with Waymo for $245 million.

Levandowsk­i, 40, faced a maximum prison sentence of 10 years and a $250,000 fine. Besides sentencing Levandowsk­i to 18 months in prison, Alsup fined him $95,000 and ordered him to pay Waymo $756,499 to reimburse the company for the costs it incurred in helping the government with its investigat­ion. It appears uncertain whether Levandowsk­i will be able to afford to make the payments. He filed for bankruptcy earlier this year after another court upheld a arbitratio­n ruling requiring him to pay Google $179 million, most of which consisted of a bonus he received for his work on selfdrivin­g cars.

In its victim statement, Waymo told Alsup that Levandowsk­i’s “misconduct was enormously disruptive and harmful to Waymo, constitute­d a betrayal, and the financial effects would likely have been even more severe had it gone undetected.”

In documents arguing why Levandowsk­i deserved prison time, U.S. Attorney David Anderson called his theft a “brazen and shocking” act that seemed driven by ego as much as greed.

“Levandowsk­i’s actions suggest he wanted to be seen as the singular inventor of the self-driving car, the way Alexander Graham Bell is credited with inventing the telephone,“Anderson wrote.

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