Trump pardons convicted former Google self-driving car engineer Levandowski | HT Tech

Trump pardons convicted former Google self-driving car engineer Levandowski

The pardon was backed by investors Peter Thiel and Blake Masters and entrepreneur Palmer Luckey, according to the White House.

By:REUTERS
| Updated on: Jan 20 2021, 13:25 IST
The White House said Levandowski had
The White House said Levandowski had "paid a significant price for his actions and plans to devote his talents to advance the public good." (REUTERS)
The White House said Levandowski had
The White House said Levandowski had "paid a significant price for his actions and plans to devote his talents to advance the public good." (REUTERS)

US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday he had given a full pardon to a former Google engineer sentenced for stealing a trade secret on self-driving cars months before he briefly headed Uber Technologies Inc's rival unit.

Anthony Levandowski, 40, was sentenced in August to 18 months in prison after pleading guilty in March. He was not in custody but a judge had said he could enter custody once the COVID-19 pandemic subsided.

The White House said Levandowski had "paid a significant price for his actions and plans to devote his talents to advance the public good."

Alphabet Inc's Waymo, a self-driving auto technology unit spun out of Google, declined to comment. The company previously described Levandowski's crime as "a betrayal" and his sentence "a win for trade secret laws."

Also read: Ex-Google engineer Anthony Levandowski gets 18 months in prison for stealing Google files

The pardon was backed by several leaders in the technology industry who have supported Trump, including investors Peter Thiel and Blake Masters and entrepreneur Palmer Luckey, according to the White House.

Levandowski transferred more than 14,000 Google files, including development schedules and product designs, to his personal laptop before he left, and while negotiating a new role with Uber.

Last year, US District Judge William Alsup in San Francisco said a sentence short of imprisonment would have given "a green light to every future brilliant engineer to steal trade secrets," comparing what Levandowski took to a "competitor's game plan."

The 75-year-old judge, who has been involved in Silicon Valley litigation for nearly five decades and sentenced Levandowski to 18 months in jail, had described Levandowski's conviction as the "biggest trade secret crime I have ever seen."

 

 

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First Published Date: 20 Jan, 13:25 IST
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