Tesla Brings on Former Enron Prosecutor to Go After Ex-Employee Accused of Hacking
Tesla has brought on Hueston Hennigan's John Hueston to file a case against Martin Tripp, a former employee of the company's Nevada battery plant accused of stealing company data.
June 20, 2018 at 06:29 PM
2 minute read
In a lawsuit against a former employee who allegedly went rogue and hacked company data, Tesla Inc. has brought on some big-name legal talent.
The company has turned to trial heavyweight John Hueston, the lead federal prosecutor in the case against former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling, to sue Martin Tripp, a former process technician at the electric car company's Nevada battery plant.
Hueston, who's now a name partner at Los Angeles litigation boutique Hueston Hennigan, filed suit for Tesla alongside Joshua Sliker, a partner in the Las Vegas office of national employment law firm Jackson Lewis.
The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada on Wednesday, claims he hacked into the company's manufacturing operating system and transferred several terabytes of data, including photos and video of Tesla manufacturing systems, to outside entities. The lawsuit also claims Tripp “wrote computer code to periodically export Tesla's data off its network and into the hands of third parties,” and that he installed his program on the computers of three other employees so that it would continue to work after he left and implicate other staff.
Read a copy of the complaint below:
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