The Boston Globe

Man in eBay stalking case seeks leniency

Says he worked for CIA, protected Biden and Gates

- By Aaron Pressman GLOBE STAFF Aaron Pressman can be reached at aaron.pressman@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter @ampressman.

A former eBay executive who mastermind­ed a bizarre stalking and harassment campaign against a Natick couple said in new court filings that he had a prior career in security that included protecting Bill Gates and Joe Biden, when he was vice president and appeared at the Oscars.

Jim Baugh, who has pleaded guilty to criminal stalking and witness tampering, is scheduled to be sentenced on Thursday. Prosecutor­s are seeking a prison sentence of 71 months and a fine of $60,000, while Baugh’s lawyers said he should serve 30 months with no fine.

While he was the global head of security at eBay in 2019, Baugh directed a campaign against Ina and David Steiner, who ran a website called Ecommerceb­ytes that covered the company. In August 2019, under Baugh’s direction, eBay employees sent the Steiners a series of harassing messages on Twitter and bizarre deliveries, including a funeral wreath, live spiders, and a bloody pig’s head mask. Baugh and several of his employees then traveled to Boston, where they attempted to install a tracking device on the Steiners’ car and followed the couple around town.

In filings to Judge Patti Saris, who will decide the sentence, Baugh and his lawyers said that before going to eBay in 2016, he had worked for Microsoft and the Central Intelligen­ce Agency’s National Clandestin­e Service, and as an independen­t security consultant.

Baugh did not describe his work for the CIA but said it was challengin­g for his family, prompting a return to the private sector where, he said, he was “employed directly by Bill Gates” to provide personal protection on trips related to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

The Gates Foundation did not respond to a request for comment.

Baugh’s private assignment­s also included working for Apple, Amazon, and Walmart, according to the filings, as well as being on the security team for then-Vice President Joe Biden at the 2016 Oscars, according to the filings.

The filings included a thankyou note, apparently from Biden to Baugh, dated March 21, 2016. “Your patience and profession­alism are apparent, and I wish you all the best,” Biden wrote.

Seven former eBay employees including Baugh have pleaded guilty for their participat­ion in the harassment campaign, which followed complaints from high-level executives about coverage of the company on the Steiners’ website.

In 2019, eBay’s then-chief executive Devin Wenig told a subordinat­e to “take her down,” in reference to Ina Steiner. After eBay’s lawyers said they had no legal means to shut down a commenter on the site who also posted on Twitter, Wenig told Baugh in an email that the problem “might be worth some research, Jim.”

The new filings also reveal a text exchange between Baugh and Wenig in which Baugh promised the problem “will be fixed.”

Martin Weinberg, a lawyer for Wenig, said in a statement to the Globe that the exchange “was both entirely lawful and utterly unrelated to what occurred,” adding that “Mr. Wenig had absolutely zero knowledge of Mr. Baugh’s actions. ... Had he known, he would have immediatel­y taken steps to stop it.” Wenig, who was allowed to resign with $57 million of severance, has not been charged in the case.

After the Steiners reported the incidents to Natick police, detectives quickly tracked the activity back to eBay and got the FBI involved. Baugh directed his employees to create a fake document to throw police off the trail, lied to eBay investigat­ors, and instructed one of his employees to lie to law enforcemen­t, according to a sentencing brief filed by prosecutor­s in the case.

In seeking the longer prison sentence for Baugh and one of his subordinat­es, David Harville, prosecutor­s said they wanted to deter future misconduct by large companies.

“Companies and their security organizati­ons are not law enforcemen­t agencies,” the prosecutor­s wrote. “Senior employees at public companies cannot run ‘ops’ against people who say things they dislike on the internet. They cannot engage in illegal self-help instead of reporting a perceived threat to law enforcemen­t, or using the courts to seek relief.”

In addition to a likely prison sentence, Baugh is also being sued by the Steiners. The lawsuit, which seeks unspecifie­d damages from Baugh, Wenig, the company, and other participan­ts, is ongoing in federal court in Boston.

 ?? JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF/FILE/2021 ?? Ina and David Steiner of
Natick were sent a series of harassing messages on Twitter and bizarre deliveries, including a funeral wreath, live spiders, and a bloody pig’s head mask.
JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF/FILE/2021 Ina and David Steiner of Natick were sent a series of harassing messages on Twitter and bizarre deliveries, including a funeral wreath, live spiders, and a bloody pig’s head mask.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States