Business Standard

Uber under criminal investigat­ion

- MIKE ISAAC

Federal investigat­ors are pursuing at least one criminal investigat­ion into Uber, according to a court document released on Wednesday.

The document, which was submitted by the United States attorney’s office in the northern district of California, does not specify what the agency is investigat­ing, but it is the first public confirmati­on by the Department of Justice of a federal inquiry into the San Francisco-based ride-hailing company. In the past, The New York Times and others have reported the existence of federal inquiries into Uber over various issues, but authoritie­s have not said anything publicly about them.

The disclosure came as a result of a stolen trade secrets case between Uber and Waymo, the self-driving vehicle unit that operates under Google’s parent company. Waymo had alleged that Anthony Levandowsk­i, a former employee, stole trade secrets about driverless cars from Google before leaving and subsequent­ly used what he learned at Uber. Uber has denied Waymo’s allegation­s. The case is scheduled to go to trial next month.

As part of the case, the Department of Justice submitted to the judge, William Alsup, the letter that was made public on Wednesday. In the letter, dated November 22, the department informed the judge that there was additional evidence that Uber had not turned over in the case, referring to claims from Richard Jacobs, a former Uber employee, that Uber had been secretly gathering intelligen­ce on competitor­s. “In the course of a United States’ pending criminal investigat­ion, the government interviewe­d a former Uber employee named Richard Jacobs,” said the letter.

Jacobs appeared in court last month to testify about his evidence, which he had written in a letter to Uber executives. The court plans to make a redacted copy of Jacobs’s letter public on Friday.

The Justice Department’s appearance in the case is unusual because the agency does not often intervene in matters outside of its own cases. Spokesmen for Waymo and the United States attorney’s office declined to comment.

 ??  ?? In the past, The New York Times and others have reported the existence of federal inquiries into Uber over various issues, but authoritie­s have not said anything publicly about them
In the past, The New York Times and others have reported the existence of federal inquiries into Uber over various issues, but authoritie­s have not said anything publicly about them

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