Last year, EBay Inc.’s then-Chief Executive Officer Devin Wenig fired off texts to a colleague expressing his ire over unflattering coverage by a blogger of his oversight of the e-commerce site. What followed, prosecutors said, was a criminal scheme by his underlings to cyber-stalk the couple behind the online newsletter.
Wenig isn’t charged in the case, but two former top EBay security executives and four other ex-employees were. While there’s no suggestion in court papers that Wenig knew of the plot, prosecutors say his angry emails triggered the scheme, and they play a central role in the narrative spelled out by the government.
“Take her down,” Wenig is alleged to have written in response to a post by the blogger.
The charges come less than a year after Wenig stepped down as EBay’s CEO amid pressure from activist investors to break the company up. The company said in a statement Monday that while “Wenig’s communications were inappropriate, there was no evidence that he knew in advance about or authorized the actions that were later directed toward the blogger and her husband.”
Wenig said in a statement he knew nothing of the alleged activities: “I have spent my career defending press freedoms. What these charges allege is unconscionable.”
Federal prosecutors claim James Baugh and David Harville led the elaborate harassment campaign, which allegedly included sending live cockroaches and a funeral wreath to the Massachusetts couple that publishes the newsletter. The ex-EBay employees also tried to place a GPS tracker on a vehicle belonging to the couple and sent them a bloody pig Halloween mask and a book on surviving the death of a spouse, according to the FBI.
“We are going to crush this lady,” an employee described in the filing as Executive 2 texted to Executive 1, who is Wenig, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified.
An article in the newsletter last year about litigation involving EBay led the two unidentified members of the online marketplace’s executive leadership team to vow revenge, the FBI claims.
The executives sent text messages to their security team saying it was time to “take down” the newsletter’s editor, according to an affidavit filed in court by the FBI.
The indictment doesn’t refer to Wenig by name. It refers to a story published on Aug. 1 with the headline “eBay RICO Lawsuit Meant to Curb Seller Exodus to Amazon?” The indictment quotes from the story: “[Executive 1] has been unable to stop a decline in market sales, but trying to dissuade sellers from turning to Amazon (and trying to get Amazon to stop recruiting sellers) may not be the best tactic.”