Bangkok Post

Man charged with oddball publishing thefts

- ELIZABETH A HARRIS

>>They were perplexing thefts, lacking a clear motive or payoff, and they happened in the genteel, not particular­ly lucrative world of publishing: Someone was stealing unpublishe­d book manuscript­s.

The thefts and attempted thefts occurred primarily over email, by a fraudster impersonat­ing publishing profession­als and targeting authors, editors, agents and literary scouts who might have drafts of novels and other books.

The mystery may now be solved. On Wednesday, the FBI arrested Filippo Bernardini, a 29-year-old rights coordinato­r for Simon & Schuster UK, saying that he “impersonat­ed, defrauded, and attempted to defraud, hundreds of individual­s” over five or more years, obtaining hundreds of unpublishe­d manuscript­s in the process.

Mr Bernardini was arrested after landing at John F Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport. Appearing in a Manhattan court the next day, he pleaded not guilty to charges that he stole the unpublishe­d manuscript­s, hoping to claim the authors’ literary ideas as his own.

A Simon & Schuster spokesman said the publisher was “shocked and horrified” by the allegation­s Mr Bernardini faces and that he has been suspended until there is further informatio­n on the case.

“The safekeepin­g of our authors’ intellectu­al property is of primary importance to Simon & Schuster, and for all in the publishing industry, and we are grateful to the FBI for investigat­ing these incidents and bringing charges against the alleged perpetrato­r,” he added. Simon & Schuster was not accused of wrongdoing in the indictment.

According to the indictment, to get his hands on the manuscript­s, Mr Bernardini would send out emails impersonat­ing real people working in the publishing industry — a specific editor, for example — by using fake email addresses. He would employ slightly tweaked domain names to fool recipients. The indictment said he had registered more than 160 fraudulent internet domains that impersonat­ed publishing profession­als and companies.

Mr Bernardini also targeted a New York City-based literary scouting company. He set up impostor login pages that prompted his victims to enter their usernames and passwords, which gave him broad access to the scouting company’s database.

Mr Bernardini left few digital crumbs online, omitting his last name on his social media accounts, like Twitter and LinkedIn, on which he described an “obsession for the written word and languages”. According to his LinkedIn profile, he obtained his bachelor’s in Chinese language from Università Cattolica in Milan and later served as the Italian translator for Chinese comic book author Rao Pingru’s memoir, Our Story.

He also obtained a master’s degree in publishing from University College London and described his passion as ensuring “books can be read and enjoyed all over the world and in multiple languages.”

For years, the scheme has baffled people in the book world. Works by high-profile writers and celebritie­s like Margaret Atwood and Ethan Hawke have been targeted, but so have story collection­s and works by first-time authors. When manuscript­s were successful­ly stolen, none of them seemed to show up on the black market or the dark web. Ransom demands never materialis­ed. Indeed, the indictment details how Mr Bernardini went about the scheme but not why.

Early knowledge in a rights department could be an advantage for an employee trying to prove his worth.

Publishers compete and bid to publish work abroad, for example, and knowing what’s coming, who is buying what and how much they’re paying could give companies an edge.

“What he’s been stealing,” said Kelly Farber, a literary scout, “is basically a huge amount of informatio­n that any publisher anywhere would be able to use to their advantage.”

Announcing the arrest, US Attorney Damian Williams said: “This real-life storyline now reads as a cautionary tale, with the plot twist of Bernardini facing federal criminal charges for his misdeeds.”

 ?? ?? The author Margaret Atwood in Toronto.
The author Margaret Atwood in Toronto.
 ?? ?? Ethan Hawke in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Ethan Hawke in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.

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