San Francisco Chronicle

Tesla alleges ex-employee stole key data

- By Tom Krisher

A former employee hacked into computers at Tesla’s Nevada battery factory, stole confidenti­al informatio­n and combined it with falsehoods in leaks to the media, the Palo Alto carmaker alleged in a federal lawsuit.

The suit was filed Wednesday, three days after CEO Elon Musk warned employees of sabotage from within the company.

Martin Tripp of Sparks, Nev., admitted to Tesla investigat­ors that he wrote software that transferre­d several gigabytes of data outside the company, including dozens of photograph­s and a video, according to the lawsuit. Hacking software from Tripp also was running on three computer systems of other employees “so that the data would be exported even after he left the company and so that those individual­s would be falsely implicated,” the lawsuit alleged.

A man who answered a call Wednesday at a number believed to be Tripp’s said he did not

know Tripp. An email message was not answered.

Tripp made false claims about the informatio­n he stole, including claims that Tesla used punctured battery cells in the Model 3 electric car, and claims about the amount and value of scrap material generated by Tesla in the manufactur­ing process, the lawsuit alleged. Some of the claims made it into news media stories about the company, but news media organizati­ons are not identified in the lawsuit.

The company also alleges that Tripp sent photograph­s and data to unspecifie­d third parties, including financial informatio­n and battery manufactur­ing details. Data was combined with false informatio­n given to the news media, the lawsuit said. The company says Tesla’s name was damaged and the company lost business due to the disclosure­s.

On Sunday night, Musk emailed employees telling them of “extensive and damaging sabotage” to the manufactur­ing operating system done under false user names. He wrote that the person’s motivation was that he wanted a promotion that he did not receive. Musk wrote that there’s a long list of organizati­ons that “want Tesla to die,” including stock short sellers and oil and gas companies. The company was investigat­ing whether the former employee acted alone, Musk wrote.

Tesla wants monetary damages and an order to prevent Tripp from obtaining or disclosing informatio­n. It also seeks a court order to inspect his computers, electronic storage devices, email accounts and external storage accounts.

Tesla would not comment on the lawsuit Wednesday.

It was unclear if the company reported the alleged thefts to law enforcemen­t.

Sparks Police Officer Ken Gallop said there was no record of an investigat­ion involving Martin Tripp. Storey County Sheriff Gerald Antinoro did not immediatel­y respond to email and telephone messages from the Associated Press. Sandra Breault, spokeswoma­n for the FBI in Nevada, said she is checking into the matter.

Tripp joined the company in October at the battery factory as a process technician, and had electronic­ally signed a nondisclos­ure agreement, the lawsuit said. Within a few months of his hiring, managers identified problems with his job performanc­e, including at times being disruptive and combative with colleagues, according to the document. He was reassigned on May 17, and retaliated against the company by stealing the informatio­n, the lawsuit alleged.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States