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The Courts

Ex-eBay Exec Pleads Guilty To Terrorizing Couple With Spiders, Funeral Wreaths (theguardian.com) 40

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: A former eBay executive pleaded guilty on Thursday to participating in a scheme to terrorize the creators of an online newsletter that included the delivery of live spiders and other disturbing items to their home. David Harville, eBay's former director of global resiliency, is the final onetime eBay employee charged in the case to plead guilty. Six others have admitted to their roles in the harassment campaign targeting a Massachusetts couple who publish the newsletter EcommerceBytes, which eBay executives viewed as critical of the company.

The scheme included sending items like a box of live cockroaches, a funeral wreath and books about surviving the loss of a spouse to the couple's home with the hopes of getting them to stop publishing negative articles about the company, prosecutors say. eBay employees also set up fake social media accounts to send threatening messages to the couple and posted the couple's home address online. Harville and others were charged in June 2020 over the plot, which authorities say was orchestrated by members of eBay's executive leadership team after the newsletter published an article about a lawsuit filed by eBay accusing Amazon of poaching its sellers, authorities said. Another former executive who pleaded guilty last month, James Baugh, held meetings to coordinate the harassment campaign and directed Harville to go with him to Boston to spy on the couple, prosecutors say.

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Ex-eBay Exec Pleads Guilty To Terrorizing Couple With Spiders, Funeral Wreaths

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  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Friday May 13, 2022 @08:06PM (#62531510)

    There are a couple of high level employees of a company that conspired to commit a crime that benefits only the company and not them themselves.

    And the company is not involved in that lawsuit whatsoever.

    Only in corporate America...

    • It's not the first time employees done some incredible stupid shit in a misguided effort to ingratiate themselves with people higher up in the corporate hierarchy. And the problem isn't limited to the US.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        TFA is talking about a director of the company, not Joe out at the loading dock.

        • So? Even executives answer to someone..

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            When Joe at the loading dock breaks the law, it reflects mostly on Joe. When the executives do it, it reflects on the company itself. Corporations are SUPPOSED to be more careful about the character of the execs they hire because they're handing them a lot of power and responsibility.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Punishing the company means punishing the shareholders, who were not involved in the criminal activities in any way whatsoever.

      So many times, a corporation is fined for misbehavior, and the Slashdot-o-sphere complains that no one is held personally responsible. Then when individual accountability finally happens, you complain about the opposite.

      A company can't order an employee to break the law. These idiots took these actions of their own volition. They should bear the full consequences.

      • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Friday May 13, 2022 @08:46PM (#62531612)

        I believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.

        • I believe corporations are people when Texas executes one.

          wouldn't that just be seizing all the assets and revoking their business license?

          • Yes, and that happens sometimes.

          • It's not an execution without an old fashioned firing squad lining in front of the corporate offices and opening fire! Or if you want to be more humane, you could always have someone go up to the building and give it a lethal injection...
      • Punishing the company means punishing the shareholders

        So is literally anything else the company does wrong, what's your point?

      • by lister king of smeg ( 2481612 ) on Friday May 13, 2022 @09:54PM (#62531740)

        Punishing the company means punishing the shareholders, who were not involved in the criminal activities in any way whatsoever.

        So many times, a corporation is fined for misbehavior, and the Slashdot-o-sphere complains that no one is held personally responsible. Then when individual accountability finally happens, you complain about the opposite.

        A company can't order an employee to break the law. These idiots took these actions of their own volition. They should bear the full consequences.

        personally i think we need to do both punish the perpetrator personally and the company for either encouraging or at the very least not penalizing the behavior. both are culpable both share the responsibility. yes the shareholders are harmed, so maybe next time they will appoint board members that will insure such behavior is not not permitted.

      • by lsllll ( 830002 )
        When shareholders buy shares of a company, they're taking "a risk". That risk includes employees of that company misbehaving, resulting in the price of the stock to go down. Do they deserve it? No. But does shit happen? Yes. So I don't feel a bit sad for the shareholders. Yes, the company didn't order the employee to break the law, but they will bear the responsibility to a certain extend when what was done was on company time and possibly using company resources. And they will definitely pay in flu
      • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 13, 2022 @10:53PM (#62531860)

        The shareholders should absolutely be punished. They own the damn company and have a voice in how it operates. What sort of a mind envisions a world where you can escape harm when you hire people to commit crimes on your behalf, for your benefit?

      • by narcc ( 412956 )

        Why not both? There is no reason I can see why both the company and the executives shouldn't face consequences.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        Individual and corporate accountability are BOTH necessary. The shareholders acted as negligent absentee owners. The (very few) people above the director in the hierarchy failed to notice and block this behavior and the shareholders failed to notice their negligence and vote in someone more responsible.

        A company cannot legally order someone to break the law. But it is also responsible for seeing to it that nobody breaks the law on it's behalf and that it's resources are not used to break the law.

        So in conc

      • The shareholders hire the board, the board hires the management, the management hires the employees. It's the responsibility of each to make sure the next one down the line is following the law. Now, if the employee had been trying to sabotage the company, that would be one thing, but the employee was working to further the goals of the company.

        Shareholders are almost never directly responsible for the bad acts of a corporation, it doesn't mean they're immune from losses as a result.
    • by evanh ( 627108 )

      It was pretty dumb action however diced. The more traditional play book is bribes and big ad deals to get more positive comments from the magazine.

      Social media practices having their impact in the boardroom too I guess.

    • U.S. corporate philosophy goes like this Something went right? We take full responsibility Something went wrong? It's anyone and everyone fault... except us.
      • "The company created 1000 jobs" vs "1000 jobs were lost in a round of layoffs"

        • No company in the history of commerce ever created a job. A job position is by default the necessary evil for a company.

          You create a job, the moment you want to buy a good or service that a company can only provide if they hire someone to do it.

  • Some eBay executive must have initiated this explicitly or implicitly. These second-level managers didn't start this out of thin air.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      From an August 2021 filing by defendant James Baugh, eBay’s senior director of safety and security: “EBay’s General Counsel, Marie Huber, had advised executives and Mr. Baugh that ordinary legal tools were unlikely to be effective in addressing issues posed by the newsletter and a Twitter account believed to be associated with the victims,” according to Monday’s filing. “Executives therefore turned to Mr. Baugh to solve the problem by less conventional means.” http [bloomberglaw.com]
    • Unless some of the others roll over they weren't going to be guilty beyond reasonable doubt.

      Unless Wymer manages to find a jury consisting entirely of Baptist millionaires I don't think he'll get off in the civil suit though.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      "CEO Devin Wenig... texted a link to Ina’s latest post... to Steve Wymer, eBay’s chief communications officer. Wymer immediately wrote back, “We are going to crush this lady.” One month later, Wenig fired off a text to Wymer with a singular directive: “Take her down.” In response, Wymer put eBay’s security division into action. In the summer of 2019, Wymer exchanged text messages with the security division’s head, Jim Baugh. “If I can neutralize Ina
  • As in Billions for emotional distress.
  • by Malays2 bowman ( 6656916 ) on Saturday May 14, 2022 @01:48AM (#62532090)

    But because he didn't shout "Allah Akbar", they don't treat it as such.

    • There has to be a political or ideological motivation to fit the definition of terrorism. So your subject line is wrong, but the body of your post is actually right... shouting "Allahu Akbar" probably would qualify it as terrorism because it would be evidence that it was motivated by an extremist islamic ideology. Of course, that wouldn't make the crime any more or less morally wrong, but we're talking about definitions.

      I assume that this crime was motivated by protecting their financial interests, or may

  • Shouldn't the couple sue eBay for billions of dollars due to the terror they faced?

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