[ISN] Former DuPont Scientist Sentenced For Trade Secret Theft

From: InfoSec News (alerts@private)
Date: Thu Nov 08 2007 - 23:01:35 PST


http://www.informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202804057

By Thomas Claburn
InformationWeek
November 8, 2007

On Tuesday, a former DuPont scientist who admitted stealing company 
secrets was sentenced to serve 18 months in prison, fined $30,000, and 
ordered to pay almost $14,500 in restitution to DuPont.

Gary Min, 44, was sentenced in Wilmington, Del., for stealing DuPont 
trade secrets, an act he admitted to in November 2006. The maximum 
sentence for his offense is 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Prior to sentencing, Min reportedly asked for leniency because 
incarceration would be a hardship on his family and because his actions 
did not result in significant financial loss to DuPont. The estimated 
value of the documents exceeded $400 million, according to the 
government.

Nonetheless, Stacey J. Mobley, senior VP and general counsel at DuPont, 
in a statement on Tuesday expressed support for the sentence.

"As a science company, DuPont takes aggressive measures to protect its 
unique and confidential technologies," she said. "Although we are 
troubled that Mr. Min violated the trust placed in him, the criminal and 
civil actions brought against him demonstrate the actions that we will 
take to preserve the integrity of our proprietary science and technology 
for the benefit of DuPont shareholders and customers. Judge Robinson 
underscored the importance of those actions by sentencing Mr. Min to 
federal prison and sent a clear signal to others who might consider 
committing similar crimes."

According to government prosecutors and affirmed by Min as part of his 
guilt plea, Min started work for DuPont as a research chemist in 1995.

In July 2005, Min began discussions with Victrex PLC, a polymer 
manufacturing company, about a job in Asia. Victrex makes a polymer 
compound called PEEK that competes with two DuPont products, Vespel and 
Kapton.

In October, Min accepted a job with Victrex that was scheduled to begin 
in January 2006. Min did not tell DuPont of his plans until December. 
Between August 2005 and December 2005, Min downloaded approximately 
22,000 abstracts and 16,000 full-text .pdf documents from DuPont's 
Electronic Data Library (EDL), most of which were unrelated to his 
professional responsibilities at DuPont.

It was the unusually high volume of EDL downloads that prompted DuPont 
to contact the FBI and begin an investigation. A DuPont spokesperson 
declined to explain whether scrutinizing network activity by departing 
employees is standard practice or whether some specific incident 
triggered a review of Min's online actions.

Shortly after he began working for Victrex, Min uploaded some 180 DuPont 
documents to his new corporate laptop. Informed of Min's actions at 
DuPont, Victrex subsequently seized Min's laptop and turned it over to 
the FBI.


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