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posted by on Sunday April 16 2017, @12:01PM   Printer-friendly
from the guilty-as-sin dept.

An Uber engineer accused of data theft against Google must privately explain the circumstances behind invoking his Fifth Amendment right to the judge in the case:

During a Wednesday court hearing, a federal judge said that if an Uber engineer accused of a massive data theft from his former employer is going to invoke his Fifth Amendment right to protect against self-incrimination and not hand over materials demanded as part of a recent subpoena and upcoming deposition, then he must at least explain himself privately to the judge.

"What I've told you is that you can submit the privilege log to me, in camera, without giving it to anyone else and I can evaluate it, which aspects, if any would be incriminating," US District Judge William Alsup said, addressing a lawyer representing the engineer, Anthony Levandowski, during the hearing. "I'm not ruling against the ultimate assertion of the privilege, but you've got to do more than just say in court, Fifth Amendment—you have to do a privilege log and go through the process."

The case pits Waymo against Uber, which in turn is in a tense situation with one of its own employees, Levandowski, the head of its self-driving division. Levandowski is now set to be deposed by Waymo lawyers this Friday at their San Francisco offices. He must also respond to a subpoena by handing over materials that he is accused of stealing— thousands of secret documents from his time with Waymo parent company, Google. On Wednesday, Judge Alsup quashed four of the six distinct items requested in the subpoena, but allowed first the most substantive, the allegedly "misappropriated materials," to stand. (The third item, "All communications between You and Uber between January 2015 and August 2016," will also remain.)


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 16 2017, @09:21PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 16 2017, @09:21PM (#494951)

    Cool, new strategy.

    State files a civil proceeding and compels the suspect to tell what he did.
    Then they use this as evidence in the criminal case.

    It doesn't make sense for the 5th to not apply in a civil case unless compelling in civil comes with criminal immunity.

  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Sunday April 16 2017, @10:31PM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Sunday April 16 2017, @10:31PM (#494981) Journal

    and compels the suspect to tell what he did

    Why do you think that had anything to do with what I wrote? Merely providing evidence is not compelling testimony.