Former Senior Director of Safety & Security &
Other Global Security Team Members Arrested
Facing 5 Yrs Prison & 3 Yrs Supervised Release & $250,000 Fine
Six Former eBay Employees Charged with Aggressive Cyberstalking Campaign
Targeting Natick Couple
Six
former employees of eBay, Inc. have been charged with leading a cyberstalking
campaign targeting the editor and publisher of a newsletter that eBay executives
viewed as critical of the company.
James Baugh, 45, of San Jose, Calif., eBay’s former Senior Director of Safety
& Security, was arrested today and charged by criminal complaint with conspiracy
to commit cyberstalking and conspiracy to tamper with witnesses.
David Harville, 48, of New York City, eBay’s former Director of Global
Resiliency, was arrested this morning in New York City on the same charges and
will make an initial appearance via videoconference in U.S. District Court in
the Southern District of New York.
In
addition the following defendants were charged in an Information unsealed today:
Stephanie Popp, 32, of San Jose, eBay’s former Senior Manager of Global
Intelligence; Stephanie Stockwell, 26, of Redwood City, Calif., the former
manager of eBay’s Global Intelligence Center (GIC); Veronica Zea, 26, of
San Jose, a former eBay contractor who worked as an intelligence analyst in
the GIC; and Brian Gilbert, 51, of San Jose, a former Senior Manager of
Special Operations for eBay’s Global Security Team. They are each charged
with conspiracy to commit cyberstalking and conspiracy to tamper with
witnesses and will make appearances in federal court in Boston at a later
date.
According to the charging documents, the victims of the cyberstalking
campaign were a Natick couple who are the editor and publisher of an online
newsletter that covers ecommerce companies, including eBay, a multinational
ecommerce business that offers platforms for consumer-to-consumer and
business-to-consumer transactions. Members of the executive leadership team at
eBay followed the newsletter’s posts, often taking issue with its content and
the anonymous comments underneath the editor’s stories.
It is alleged that in August 2019, after the newsletter published an article
about litigation involving eBay, two members of eBay’s executive leadership
team sent or forwarded text messages suggesting that it was time to “take
down” the newsletter’s editor.
As part of the second phase of the campaign, some of the defendants
allegedly sent private Twitter messages and public tweets criticizing the
newsletter’s content and threatening to visit the victims in Natick. The
documents allege that Baugh, Gilbert, Popp and another eBay security employee
planned these messages to become increasingly disturbing, culminating with
“doxing” the victims (i.e., publishing their home address). It is alleged that
the very same group intended then to have Gilbert, a former Santa Clara
police captain, approach the victims with an offer to help stop the harassment
that the defendants were secretly causing, in an effort to promote good will
towards eBay, generate more favorable coverage in the newsletter, and identify
the individuals behind the anonymous comments.
The third phase of the campaign allegedly involved covertly surveilling the
victims in their home and community. According to the complaint, Harville
and Zea registered for a software development conference to explain their trip
to Boston on Aug. 15, 2019. Baugh, Harville, and Zea (and later Popp)
allegedly drove to the victims’ home in Natick several times, with Harville and
Baugh intending at one point to break into the victims’ garage and install a GPS
tracking device on their car. As protection in the event they were stopped by
local police, Baugh and Harville allegedly carried false documents purporting to
show that they were investigating the victims as “Persons of Interest” who had
threatened eBay executives. The victims spotted the surveillance, however, and
notified the Natick police, who began to investigate. The police learned that
Zea had rented one of the cars used by the defendants and reached out to eBay
for assistance.
The charges of conspiracy to commit cyberstalking and conspiracy to tamper with
witnesses each carry a sentence of up to five years in prison, three years of
supervised release, a fine of up to $250,000 and restitution. Sentences are
imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines and other statutory factors.
justice.gov