The Sentinel-Record

Feds: eBay staff sent spiders, roaches to harass couple

- ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

Six former eBay Inc. employees have been charged with waging an extensive campaign to terrorize and intimidate the editor and publisher of an online newsletter with threats and disturbing deliveries to their home, including live spiders and cockroache­s, federal authoritie­s said Monday.

Executives were upset about the newsletter’s coverage, so their employees set out to ruin the lives of the couple who ran the website, sending a funeral wreath, bloody pig face Halloween mask and other alarming items to their home, authoritie­s said. The employees also sent pornograph­ic magazines with the husband’s name on it to their neighbor’s house and planned to break into the couple’s garage to install a GPS device on their car, officials said.

“This was a determined, systematic effort by senior employees of a major company to destroy the lives of a couple in Natick all because they published content that company executives didn’t like. For a while they succeeded, psychologi­cally devastatin­g these victims for weeks as they desperatel­y tried to figure out what was going on and stop it,” Massachuse­tts U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling told reporters.

James Baugh, of San Jose, California, who was eBay’s senior director of safety & security, and David Harville, of New York City, who was eBay’s director of global resiliency, are charged with conspiracy to commit cyber

stalking and conspiracy to tamper with witnesses. The other former eBay employees charged are Stephanie Popp, former senior manager of global intelligen­ce; Brian Gilbert, former senior manager of special operations for eBay’s Global Security Team; Stephanie

Stockwell, former manager of eBay’s Global Intelligen­ce Center; and Veronica Zea, a former eBay contractor who worked as an intelligen­ce analyst in the Global Intelligen­ce Center.

There were no lawyers listed for them in court documents.

Court documents detail how two members of the company’s executive leadership team orchestrat­ed a plot to go after the couple after the newsletter published an article in August 2019 about a lawsuit filed by eBay accusing Amazon of poaching its sellers. The article also discussed an executive, referred only in court documents as “Executive 1,” according to court documents.

A half hour after the article was published, “Executive 1” texted another executive, identified as “Executive 2”: “(Victim 1) is out with a hot piece on the litigation. If you are ever going to take her down.. now is the time,” according to court documents.

An online article with the same headline as the one described in court documents shows the person described as “Executive 1” as eBay’s CEO, who was then Devin Wenig.

Wenig stepped down in September and is not charged in the case. On Monday, a person who answered at a phone number listed for Wenig said “we’re not interested,” before hanging up.

In addition to the disturbing deliveries, the employees set up fake social media accounts to send threatenin­g messages to the couple, authoritie­s said. After the bloody pig mask was delivered, the editor received a message saying: “DO I HAVE UR ATTENTION NOW ???? ,” according to court documents. They also posted the couple’s names and address online, advertisin­g things like yard sales and encouragin­g strangers to knock on the door if they weren’t outside.

Authoritie­s said the staff lied to police about eBay’s involvemen­t in the cyberstalk­ing campaign, and lied to company lawyers about their roles. Gilbert, a former police captain in Santa Clara California, even reached out to the couple to offer help in stopping the harassment, authoritie­s said.

“They hoped this ‘white knight strategy’ would create some good will toward the company, result in more favorable articles and please eBay’s management,” said Joseph Bonavolont­a, special agent in charge of the FBI office in Boston.

An internal investigat­ion was launched after eBay was notified by law enforcemen­t in August of “suspicious actions by its security personnel,” company officials wrote in a prepared statement. The employees were fired in September, the company said.

Wenig said at the time that he was stepping down over difference­s with the board of directors and the company didn’t clarify Monday whether this investigat­ion played a role in his departure.

The committee formed by the company’s board of directors to oversee the investigat­ion said eBay “took these allegation­s very seriously from the outset.”

“Upon learning of them, eBay moved quickly to investigat­e thoroughly and take appropriat­e action,” it said.

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