BUSINESS
MARCH
22, 1999 VOL. 153 NO. 11
Eyeing The
Competition
Corporate espionage is so pernicious that the
U.S. passed a law to curb it. But in today's global economy,
dirty tricks are all in a day's work
BY DANIEL EISENBERG
The title of the
hand-scribbled memo outlined Waste Management's goal in no
uncertain terms: "Cadiz Kill." In 1995 Cadiz Inc., an
agricultural firm based in Santa Monica, Calif., was leading
opposition to Waste Management's proposal to build a
mega-garbage dump near its property. So, like any other
tactically thinking business, the country's largest trash
hauler brought in a consultant to get things moving.
Joseph Lauricella, though, wasn't your typical McKinsey
man. He set up a sham pro-dump grassroots organization. His
duties, according to San Bernardino County grand jury
indictments and his testimony, included swiping confidential
data, sabotaging potential deals and spreading rumors that
linked Cadiz to illegal dumping and drug trafficking--all in
an attempt to drive down its stock price and cripple its
lobbying efforts. Last fall Lauricella was sentenced to six
years in prison for his consulting efforts. Waste Management
and four of its executives, who claim that Lauricella was a
renegade acting on his own, have pleaded not guilty to various
charges, including stock fraud and wiretapping.
Waste Management may specialize in garbage, but it isn't
the only outfit accused of playing dirty. Far from it. Just
last week, Motorola sued Intel for allegedly hiring away key
employees to obtain its microchip trade secrets.
Minneapolis-based agribusiness giant Cargill recently
acknowledged that a rogue employee may have lifted proprietary
genetic material from a competitor, an admission that
effectively killed a $650 million deal to sell its North
American seed division to a German biotech venture.
Next week a Taiwanese father-and-daughter business team is
scheduled to be tried for paying a U.S. research engineer to
pilfer manufacturing secrets from label maker Avery Dennison.
Another Taiwan-based executive goes on trial in early April,
charged with attempting to buy the secret formula for
Bristol-Myers Squibb's cancer drug Taxol for $400,000--just
one of many alleged plots to fleece R. and D.-rich
pharmaceutical firms. Last spring a Gillette consultant went
to prison for trying to market secret designs of the company's
Mach3 razor to competitors such as Bic. And a small Maryland
soft-drink distributor claims that Coca-Cola Enterprises, the
bottler partly owned by Coke, used wiretapping and other shady
tactics to destroy his business. CCE denies all the charges.
Cheating in business, of course, is older than the wheel.
But corporate spooks and saboteurs are especially busy in
today's global, high-tech economy, where the most prized
assets can be stored on a disk and surveillance equipment can
fit on a shirt button. To help slow them down, Congress passed
the Economic Espionage Act of 1996, which carries a long
prison term for intellectual-property theft. The good guys
haven't had much luck yet, though not for lack of effort. The
FBI has nearly tripled its investigations into corporate
espionage in the past year. But in 1997 at least $25 billion
in intellectual property was stolen from U.S. corporations, by
a conservative estimate. And these aren't just cases of
foreign spies left over from the cold war working for new
capitalist bosses. Increasingly, U.S. firms are turning to
Dumpster divers or computer hackers to stay ahead of the
competition, and disgruntled workers are walking off with
classified material. One worrisome ploy, the FBI says, is to
send in spies posing as tech consultants on the Y2K computer
bug.
The first federal economic-espionage case to go to trial,
however, is decidedly low-tech--in essence, it's all about
glue. In Youngstown, Ohio, next week, Justice Department
attorneys will argue that Pin Yen Yang, president of
Taiwan-based Four Pillars Enterprise, and his daughter paid
Avery Dennison engineer Ten Hong "Victor" Lee $67,500 over a
four-year period to steal the $3 billion-a-year company's
formulas for making adhesive labels and tape. Officials say
China--already defending against charges of nuclear espionage
in the Los Alamos case--and Taiwan are among the most
notorious purloiners of business secrets, allegedly sending
graduate students to infiltrate companies and bring data home.
But, as in any case of cloak-and-dagger, it's sometimes
hard to tell exactly who's snookering whom. Four Pillars
recently turned the tables and filed suit in China and Taiwan,
charging that in the late '80s and early '90s, Avery lured the
much smaller Four Pillars (annual sales: $140 million) into
discussion about a joint venture in China in order to steal
manufacturing information so it could set up its own competing
factory. Intriguingly, Four Pillars will argue that by luring
the government into the case and helping the FBI set up a
sting operation, Avery used the Economic Espionage Act as a
competitive weapon. Avery Dennison, which denies those
charges, says Four Pillars' suit is simply an attempt to
"distract attention from its own criminal conduct."
In this era of downsizing and diminished corporate loyalty,
close to two-thirds of all U.S. intellectual-property losses
can be traced to insiders, according to Richard J. Heffernan,
a Branford, Conn., security consultant and co-author of a
biannual espionage survey by the American Society for
Industrial Security. "People are always looking for somebody
who looks different, when a great deal of the theft is
committed by insiders who walk and talk just like you and me,"
notes Heffernan. MORE>>
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