The Arizona Republic

Uber fires autonomous-car researcher

- TOM KRISHER

DETROIT - Uber has followed through on threats to fire star autonomous-car researcher Anthony Levandowsk­i, whose hiring touched off a bitter trade-secrets fight with Waymo, the former self-driving car arm of Google.

Waymo has alleged that Levandowsk­i downloaded 14,000 documents containing its trade secrets before he left the company to found a startup that was later purchased by Uber. Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge William Alsup ordered Uber to return the documents and referred the case to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Francisco for possible criminal investigat­ion.

Uber General Counsel Salle Yoo told Levandowsk­i in a letter filed in court by Levandowsk­i’s lawyers that he hasn’t complied with Uber’s requests to cooperate in obeying the judge’s order to return the documents.

“Your failure impeded Uber’s internal investigat­ion and defense of the lawsuit,” the letter, dated Friday, stated. It said that Levandowsk­i was fired for cause and that he has a contractua­l right to correct “deficienci­es” within 20 days.

A telephone message was left Tuesday afternoon for Levandowsk­i. His lawyers did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

San Francisco-based Uber appears to be blaming the stolen documents solely on Levandowsk­i in an effort to defend itself against Waymo’s lawsuit.

The company’s letter to Levandowsk­i states that he “represente­d and warranted” in his employment agreement that he has returned or destroyed all property and confidenti­al informatio­n from any previous employer.

On May 19, Uber threatened to fire Levandowsk­i unless he waived his constituti­onal right against self-incriminat­ion so the ride-hailing service could comply with the court order. Levandowsk­i has asserted his rights under the Fifth Amendment since Waymo filed its lawsuit in February.

In documents posted Tuesday, Levandowsk­i’s lawyers said Alsup’s order “has thus placed Mr. Levandowsk­i on the horns of an unconstitu­tional dilemma: either he must waive his Fifth Amendment rights and provide the informatio­n and materials specified by the order or face immediate firing.”

Levandowsk­i’s expertise in robot-controlled cars is the main reason that the ride-hailing company bought his startup for $680 million nine months ago. Uber wants to develop a fleet of self-driving cars so its service eventually won’t have to rely on people to pick up passengers. The company is testing autonomous cars with real passengers in Pittsburgh and elsewhere.

Any admission by Levandowsk­i that he possesses Waymo documents could embroil him in even deeper legal trouble. The U.S. Attorney’s Office would not comment on any possible investigat­ion.

Uber had been standing by Levandowsk­i’s right to use his Fifth Amendment protection­s until Alsup issued the decision requiring the company to return any documents belonging to Waymo by May 31.

Alsup wrote that “in complying with this order, Uber has no excuse under the Fifth Amendment to pull any punches as to Levandowsk­i.”

In a court filing, Levandowsk­i’s attorneys argued that it’s unconstitu­tional for a judge to strong-arm an employer into pressuring a worker to give up his Fifth Amendment rights to remain on the job.

 ?? AP ?? Anthony Levandowsk­i is shown in San Francisco in December, when he was head of Uber’s self-driving vehicle program.
AP Anthony Levandowsk­i is shown in San Francisco in December, when he was head of Uber’s self-driving vehicle program.

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