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Apple concerned former employees accused of stealing 'Apple Car' trade secrets will flee before trial

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Apple representatives on Monday appeared in federal court to ensure the locations of two former employees accused of stealing trade secrets are continuously monitored, arguing the pair pose flight risks.

Three Apple employees appeared at U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California to support prosecutors in an attempt to continue persistent tracking of the accused individuals before trial, reports Reuters.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Marissa Harris argued constant monitoring is vital to the case, noting that extradition would be nearly impossible if either of the Chinese-born defendants were to flee back to their home country. Harris relayed Apple's concerns on the matter by reading a statement at a hearing today, according to the report.

"Apple's intellectual property is at the core of our innovation and growth," Apple said in the prepared statement. "The defendants' continued participation in these proceedings is necessary to ensure a final determination of the facts, and we have deep concerns the defendants will not see this through if given the opportunity."

In July 2018, Xiaolang Zhang, a former Apple hardware engineer who worked on the company's autonomous car project, was arrested at San Jose International Airport while attempting to board a plane to China.

A member of "Project Titan's" Compute Team, a group tasked with designing and testing circuit boards to analyze data ingested by various vehicle sensors, Zhang last year informed management that he planned to exit the company for Chinese electric car startup XMotors. After noticing unusual activity on company devices and at Apple's campus, the tech giant confronted Zhang and discovered the engineer had stolen a number of items from its labs, including two circuit boards and a linux server.

The second employee attached to today's hearing, Jizhong Chen, was in January found to have stolen manuals, diagrams, schematics and hundreds of photos inside secret Apple workspaces. He, too, announced intent to relocate to a self-driving startup based in China.



24 Comments

dysamoria 12 Years · 3430 comments

How does a person work for Apple AND steal a circuit board and a Linux SERVER? I thought the security at Apple was beyond paranoid.

davgreg 9 Years · 1050 comments

So if you work for Apple they own your soul forever?

rob53 13 Years · 3313 comments

davgreg said:
So if you work for Apple they own your soul forever?

Not your soul, if you have one, but they do own their IP and that's what these employees are being charged with. They had access to lots of proprietary information. It's not theirs to do anything with except their job. Once their job is done, that information stays with Apple. It's real simple but some people have a difficult time understand what's right and what's illegal.

JWSC 7 Years · 1203 comments

No sense of right or wrong whatsoever.  And one of these guys supposedly had Patriot missile data from a previous defense employer, which means he would have had a security clearance.  Somebody didn’t do their homework on theses guys.  Lock ‘em up!

lkrupp 19 Years · 10521 comments

davgreg said:
So if you work for Apple they own your soul forever?

What part of this do you not understand? Apple owns the stuff this thief stole from them. Why do you always try to put negative spin on everything?