Behind the Bastards - Part Two: That Time eBay's Private Spies Went To War With Some Bloggers
Episode Date: September 5, 2024Robert and Jason continue the thrilling story of this Jim Baugh and Ebay's war against some elderly bloggers. Behind the Bastards is now available on YouTube! New videos every Wednesday and Friday. (B...acklog episodes on Saturdays until we catch up) Subscribe to our channel: Youtube.com/@behindthebastards Sources: Inside eBay’s Cockroach Cult: The Ghastly Story of a Stalking Scandal - The New York Times (archive.is) Investigation into eBay continues after stalking scandal | 60 Minutes - CBS News U.S. Criminally Charges EBay in Cyberstalking Case - The New York Times (nytimes.com) At eBay, Lurid Crimes and the Search for Punishment - The New York Times (archive.is) Lawsuit: eBay tried to “terrorize, stalk, and silence” couple that ran news site | Ars Technica ‘Cyber Mercenaries’: Israel’s Spyware Industry Is Getting Slammed Around the World - Israel News - Haaretz.com (archive.is) Hackers Reveal Offers to Spy on Corporate Rivals - The New York Times (nytimes.com) https://www.ecommercebytes.com/011124-docs/Information.pdf https://hackernoon.com/the-notorious-walkers-west-fallout-inside-ebays-disturbing-retribution-tactics https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/22/ebay-shares-surge-on-elliott-management-1point4-billion-stake.html https://www.cnbc.com/2019/01/22/ebay-shares-surge-on-elliott-management-1point4-billion-stake.html https://archive.is/TLa2d https://puck.news/a-spy-in-silicon-valley/ https://www.theguardian.com/media/blog/2011/dec/07/thomson-reuters-merger-failings https://www.theguardian.com/media/2007/may/15/reuters.pressandpublishingSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Discussion (0)
Oh my gosh, welcome back to Behind the Bastards, a podcast that recently also pivoted to video.
But not this week for me.
You are seeing Jason, you're seeing some sort of animated version of me right now because
every week my camera does something different for reasons that are unfathomable to me and deeply frustrating.
I love pivoting to video, Jason.
That's something you and I both have great experiences with
and it's working really well.
There's a wonderful little lesson here listeners
because Robert is using a very fancy actual camera,
the type of which you would use
to film a professional video.
I am using a $50 Logitech web camera that has no buttons on it.
There's not a single button. There's no software that operates it.
No, I can't do, I can't screw up the setup of it. Cause I never did anything.
I plugged in the little USB cord and I appeared if it,
if anything else other than that had happened, I would have been helpless.
Yeah.
And that's how we used to do things before we recorded video and it looked fine.
And then we got a camera that also looked fine, but breaks periodically because I don't know why.
Anyway, Jason, do you think we should bomb all of the power plants and return to living in caves like our ancestors fighting
bears for scarce resources.
Those are my favorite social media accounts that talk about like, we need to get back
to when we are all just each growing our own food.
That's when the standard of living was higher back when we all, when one blight could wipe out your crops
and your whole family would starve.
It's the-
Get back to that.
I just, it would be so much more refreshing
to deal with a bear right now than a camera.
I understand a bear, right?
Bears are very easy.
They have very, very obvious wants and needs.
I don't have to figure out how a shutter works for a bear.
I just have to figure out how to get higher than the bear
or hide my food in a big barrel
or have like spears and hide around a fire.
I think we should replace all of our technology with bears.
Jason is kind of where I land on this journey.
Like, what if instead of, you know,
for example, kids using chat GPT to do their college essays,
they just brought bears to school
and we let the bears fight it out, you know?
It's a better world.
I mean, it's my understanding
that that's how the Soviet Union worked for centuries
is an entirely bear-based society
based on the various
cartoons I saw. Yeah that's what Marx was really working at was getting
us all back to a foundation of bears. Anyway I don't know why we got off on
the tangent. Jason are you ready to hear more about how eBay just absolutely
loses its mind and has a former CIA guy try to destroy the lives of a nice
elderly blocker couple?
Yeah, right here is where this becomes
one of the weirdest stories I've heard in my entire life.
Yeah, well that's, and more, well, just actually that,
but there's a lot there.
When we come back from the cold open.
In California, during the summer of 1975,
within the span of 17 days and less than 90 miles,
two women did something no other woman had done before, try to assassinate the president
of the United States.
One was the protege of Charles Manson, 26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI, identified by police
as Sarah Jean Moore in her 40s.
The story of one strange and violent summer.
This season on the new podcast Rip Current.
Listen to Rip Current on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to
your favorite shows.
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Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
And we're back from the cold open.
So Jason, a megacorpor corporation like eBay makes a lot of enemies
and the Steiners are not the only people
on Devin Winnig's shit list.
However, his shit list was entirely weirdly,
freakishly petty.
One of the people he hated most,
the only guy really at the same level
as the Steiners on Devin's shit list
was an anonymous Twitter account called FidoMaster,
AKA at unsuck eBay.
Now, you and I have dealt with this guy all our lives, right?
This is an angry dude online who hates you specifically
for reasons that are complex and deeply personal.
In FidoMaster's case,
based on some stuff he's made public,
because we actually don't know who this guy is,
his wife used to sell things on eBay
and got angry at company policies.
And so he just decided to become
their loudest hater on Twitter.
Now, I'm saying this, when I say a hater,
I don't mean like, you know, there's people right now,
there's a whole industry and like,
there's a bunch of guys who make all of their money
now that Musk has monetized Twitter,
like sharing different clips of different right-wing grifters
that they hate.
And those guys exist on the right too.
There's entire accounts dedicated to Joe Biden,
or libs of TikTok and stuff,
where they're monetized hating accounts.
That's a sizable chunk of how you make money
in internet content.
It's like picking one person or a specific group of people, grabbing clips of them doing
stuff out in the world, and then just being a hater.
A lot of that stuff, we can argue about what it says about humanity, that it's so profitable.
But it's profitable because millions of people engage with that content.
They listen to it, they read it, they share it.
It's extremely popular stuff.
Fido master-
We don't try our internet economy would collapse
if that personality type disappeared.
We really need them.
Yeah, it's like a solid 40% of Silicon Valley's money
is related in one way or another to that kind of guy.
Fido master is not really that kind of an account.
Most of his posts about eBay,
in the period where he becomes like the obsessive focus
of a lot of the CEO's anger,
get like a dozen likes, right?
Yet for reasons unknown,
the entire C-suite and eBay,
kind of pivoting off of Devin's obsession,
came to believe that Fido Master had dominated
the social media narrative around the company.
That this guy is like, has influenced how everyone online
is talking about eBay because of his insidious
posting skills.
Now, I have not seen any evidence whatsoever
that this guy harmed eBay's bottom line in any way.
And like with the Steiners, at least you can say yes, there were people at Elliott Management
and other big investment funds who took seriously what the Steiners were saying.
I don't think that's really true of anyone for Fido Master.
He just for whatever reason, Winnig can't get over the fact that there's this hater
on eBay talking shit about how he's running the company.
I'm telling you, this kind of paranoia has been everywhere since Twitter came along.
There are companies that had entire meetings with all of their executives over how, over
they had rolled out some product or some ad campaign about they were having a meeting
with their PR people, everybody else, about the backlash we're getting on Twitter.
We're getting canceled on Twitter.
When what they were talking about was a total of three people complaining and
each of their lie, each of their tweets got four likes, but the perception that,
Oh my gosh, we're getting canceled on Twitter.
People used to be, and maybe still are, they used to be so scared of that, oh my gosh, we're getting canceled on Twitter. People used to be, and maybe still are,
they used to be so scared of that,
that they would immediately fire somebody
or immediately pull the ad, whatever,
based on the meagreest, tiniest little bit
of criticism on there.
So I can totally see how they got freaked out by it.
And it's the same as journalism has gotten the hollad at
as an industry. There's a lot like as journalism has gotten a hollered at as an industry,
there's like a lot of political journalism
is just leftists.
Look at this new trend that's spreading among leftists.
Look at this new trend spreading among Trump supporters.
And it's like, well, you got three Twitter accounts there.
You've got like a handful of posts a guy made
that might've just been a joke.
And I haven't seen any evidence that anyone did anything
in the real world as a result of this.
But suddenly, like this is a trend,
or this is a trend among Gen Z,
because you found like a dozen kids
joking about it or whatever.
Like it is-
It does not take a dozen.
They can find literally-
Yeah, not even a minute.
You read those articles,
they typically have literally three examples.
That seems to be the rule with most newsrooms.
If you can find three tweets, three TikToks, whatever,
you can now say, well,
there's a new trend among Gen Z.
They make up a name for it.
It's like, no, it was these three people who all went to the same middle school.
Yeah.
And that kind of thinking is clearly at play with Winig and with eBay's C-suite here.
Every, regardless of how much actual engagement he's getting, because some of Fido master
suites do get a lot more engagement, but there's no evidence,
even the ones that do are moving the needle for eBay.
What moves the needle for eBay is the C-suite wasting
a shitload of money and not adequately responding
to the fact that Amazon is starting to eat their lunch,
right, but that would require like them to take a hard look
at how they actually function as executives,
as opposed to just obsessing over this Twitter account.
You're seeing the same thing with Hollywood today,
where there'll be some movie that they spent $300 million on
based around a comic book character
nobody had ever heard of, and it bombs,
and then somebody there in the studio will say,
well, you know what it was,
it was all these trolls on Twitter.
These right-wing trolls, it's like,
man, they can't sink a blockbuster movie.
These 25 trolls on Twitter, they cannot sink a franchise.
You did that.
You did that.
Yep.
And it's, I mean, I don't know.
I've been kind of shocked at the reaction to the Acolyte
because I watched that and like, I didn't like it I've been kind of shocked at the reaction to the Acolyte because I watched that and like,
I didn't like it as much as I liked Andor,
but like it struck me as like, oh,
if you're someone who's into like the classic Star Wars
stuff, the Jedi and the lightsabers,
this seems like it has everything you want.
Some of the best choreographed fights I've ever seen,
the whole thing looks great, some decent performances,
like, but no, just the reaction reaction to it is this is the biggest disaster
in Disney history, and a lot of it just seems to be
because people on Twitter got angry at it.
Maybe, but also that show cost $600,000 per minute
of screen time. Right.
Like you can say, well, it's all this backlash
from these jerks.
Like if the show had been good, and if you'd kept it on some sort of a reasonable budget,
you've been fine.
The backlash was there,
but if anything, it just made the show more visible.
Yeah.
Anyway.
Anyway, fascinating stuff.
And yeah, so this is,
we're talking about kind of how it's writ large
with these massive Hollywood productions and stuff,
but what we're seeing in eBay is how these obsessions actually spread within the heads
of the people running these companies.
I do think it's worth making the comparison to how corporations respond to some of these
weirdly outlandish ways to Twitter trolling, because it is the same psychology on display
at least.
So because Fido master is an obsession to Winig, he winds up getting, you know, getting
on Boggs plate, right?
Enough people who are one step below the CEO, but a step or two above Bogg forward him like,
hey, the boss is really freaking out about this guy.
Here's another post.
You should really look into this guy, right?
And for reasons that have never been explained to me,
Bogg becomes convinced that FidoMaster
is not just some guy with a grudge against eBay,
it's Ina Steiner or her husband David,
and they're running some sort of complex scheme
whereby they have both a blog
where they publish very fair journalism
that's sometimes critical of eBay,
and this Twitter account that just kind of trolls
the company and they're trying to operate both in tandem
to destroy eBay's profitability
and personally damage Devin Winnig, right?
That is the theory that former CIA operator
fucking Jim Bogg comes up with.
And there's no reason for him to think this.
The writing is not similar between the accountant
and anything that Stein-Ina does.
And Bogg has no evidence that there's like,
that the posts are coordinated with the tweets
or the articles are coordinated with the tweets.
But based on just this kind of feeling he has,
he decides he calls this former police captain
that he has doing physical surveillance of the Steiner residence.
And he says, I want you to go onto their property at night and spray paint the name Fido master
on the outside of their home.
Because that'll let him know we're onto their scheme. So the idea was that this is going to prove that this will be showing them like, hey,
we're onto you.
Right.
We know what you're doing.
I don't think it's to prove it.
It's to like, spook them.
How confused must they have been?
What must they have thought that even was?
I mean, I think he didn't do it.
He said he was ordered to do it.
Did he actually do it. Yes. Yes.
And I think if I'm the Steiners at this point, my assumption would be like,
oh, maybe that's some like graffiti artist with a weird tag in town.
Oh, Fido master.
He tags freeways and occasionally suburban homes outside of Boston.
It's his favorite thing.
You'd assume or maybe it was slang or something.
You would never figure it out.
You would never assume this was done
by a former police captain on the orders
of a former CIA operator working directly
for the C-suite at eBay, because that's insane.
So now the question is, did that CEO
who we spent most of the last episode talking to,
did he know this occurred, or is there any way to know?
Like if he did know, is it something where it would have been said verbally in
a hallway and not documented somewhere?
Not in a, now a lot of messages get deleted.
So I guess the answer I would say is not in a way that has been proven in court and in
such a manner that it makes it legally obvious that Devin Winnig was responsible for this.
Do I think it's likely he had some awareness of what his security team was doing?
I think that's a fair thing to state.
But again, a lot of messages are not present and most of Bogg does have a good amount of
direct contact with Winnig, which is again, he's not unaware of aspects of this.
He definitely knows about aspects of this that are, he definitely
knows about aspects of this.
Precisely what he knows about is a little hard to say, right?
Because a lot of, a lot of who Bog is communicating with directly is like the guy one step below
the CEO, right?
The fact that any of this made it into an email tells you that Bog didn't know what
he was doing.
Right.
Of course, he's the worst at this.
It's unbelievably stupid, like shoddy.
I know not to put that stuff in an email that somebody can recover that.
Somebody.
That's going to come out.
Especially, again, my good God in a work email account.
Yeah.
It's...
Yeah.
It's unbelievable stuff. So Bogg followed this up with a campaign of harassment against Fido Master's Twitter account,
despite the fact that his vaunted analyst team hadn't been able to uncover the account
owner's name.
From the New York Times, quote, Fido Master received an unsolicited message from a new
Twitter user calling herself Marissa.
Her picture showed her to be about 25.
Claiming to be a former eBay employee,
she said she possessed extremely damaging videos
of executives misbehaving
and wanted help passing them to the Steiners.
So they're like, we'll prove that this guy
is working with the Steiners by reaching out to her
and saying, we have like embarrassing videos
of eBay executives behaving badly
and we think you can get these to the Steiners.
So she's trying to fish for Fido Master to acknowledge,
yeah, I know them.
Fido Master is like, well, it looks like Ms. Steiner
has a public email address for her public website.
If you wanna get something to her,
you should probably go to her.
I don't know her.
Marissa's like, well, how about if I leave the videos
on a thumb drive
at a hotel in the city of your choice,
and you can deliver them to the Steiners?
And Phytomaster's like,
well, no, that sounds incredibly shady.
Why would I ever do that?
I don't know these people.
Like, what is wrong with you?
The wilder your suggestions got,
the more Phytomaster resisted,
because whoever's running this account is clearly like has above a room temperature
IQ and it's just like well, no
So I don't know what's going on because no one would guess that what's going on is what's going on here
But he has enough to know like no
I'm not gonna do a dead drop of a bunch of videos for you random person on Twitter who thinks I know this lady
So he starts suggesting
just like, hey, get a lawyer. Like if you're worried that you'll be harassed or attacked
for having this information, like talk to a lawyer, I can't help you. Now, Marissa
is in reality played by two of Boggs angels. As you may have guessed by now, Boggs policy
of hiring hot chicks did not lead to him having a team that had particularly good spy credentials.
Veronica Zee, one of the young women who played Marissa, had only used eBay once before being
hired.
She had studied criminology in college, but had no relevant job experience when she was
hired at age 23.
And criminology degrees don't actually tell people how to carry out criminal espionage.
That's not really like why you get that degree.
It's mainly to learn, well, it's mainly to learn
a lot of misinformation about blood spatter and DNA,
but like that's kind of beside the point for now.
In short-
And it's not sexist for us to point out
that his criteria for hiring these women was probably.
No, like that they're just all young women.
No, no, no, no, no.
It's just that like, they don't,
I'm not saying that they're dumb.
I don't get that feeling.
They just don't have any experience
committing illegal harassment campaigns, right?
Like they don't have any kind of relevant job experience
to this.
Like they're just ladies that he was attracted to and he hired to stalk some strangers.
And they're not very good at this, right?
Like that's kind of the point.
But yeah, this is not like, I think any, I will say just based on how Jim and his former
police captain perform, if they had hired a bunch of men who thought that they would
be really good at spies, I don't think they would have been more competent in this job.
Because it's a dumb thing to be doing and no one was going to do this job very well.
So I should emphasize here that the unhinged paranoia and rage over the Steiners and Fido
master was not just contained to the CEO and his chief of security.
On June 25th, 2019, chief of communications, Steve Weimer,
texted two eBay communications employees
about an e-commerce bites article
that mildly noted some issues eBay had with a competitor.
The executive stated he could not complain
about the article, but then added, crazily,
love it when a secret, we can't speak it out loud,
plan comes together.
And then like a winking emoji and added, we always reserve the right to go zero to 60
and get crazy on her ass.
But this is a huge adjustment the last month, ever since the Walker's post, which is the
post about that bar that got created.
So again, they are just putting the shit in messages, right?
Like Steve Weimer is part of the C-suite.
He's the chief of communications.
He is the guy that Winig is talking to.
And then Weimer is communicating very directly with Bog about all of the crimes that they're
committing.
And he's just like emailing back and forth like, I love our secret plan.
I can't wait to go zero to 60 and get crazy on her ass.
Great shit.
And where's the voice of reason in this?
Like this has to be a corporate culture thing.
This is why you can't whoever, I know not everybody's going to go down for this,
but that's weird how nobody involved is like, are we talking about the same thing?
Are you talking about the lady that the blogs about the, the, the E E sales scene?
Yeah.
What is it that you guys are all yelling about?
You're really mad about something.
Which posts are you really, I guess I missed it.
Cause I just saw her like briefly mentioned.
It's like, no, that's the one we need to do to fling her into a volcano.
Yeah.
Like this lady is our al-qaeda like we are we are going doing a war on terror against her
It's so weird. There was something there with their corporate
With their corporate culture that was so weird. It's a mix of I think you don't question
The CEO you don't question the executives above you and they don't question the CEO, you don't question the executives above you,
and they don't question the people above them.
So when you have a guy like Winig,
who I think is just a really insecure person
who's not used to any kind of criticism,
he's kind of born rich,
he gets to become a CEO at age 23
because his dad had had the job,
I think he's just kind of a petty person
who's not very secure.
And when you have this kind of corporate culture
that is so personality driven,
his characteristics get sort of filtered out
to become characteristics of how the company operates,
both in terms of who he hires,
which are people that he like feels simpatico with,
and they feel pressured to act in ways
that are going to be pleasing to him.
I really do think a lot of it comes down to that.
I hope I'm not just beating the dead horse here
because this is somebody who has lived in public,
is running an internet company.
I mean, how old were you the first time somebody,
a stranger on the internet,
threatened violence against you for something you had written or said?
Probably the first time I had a cracked article published, you know, when I was like 19.
Maybe earlier in arguments on something awful. I don't know. Yeah.
Yeah. And they didn't invent the internet until I was in my 20s, but it was within the first month of me getting my first
AOL account that somebody told me they wanted me to die or they're going to come to my house
and kill me because of a joke I had made.
I'm not condoning that behavior.
I'm just saying if you live in the public eye on the internet and you and I have now
been doing it for most of our lives, that's just the way, that's the noise the internet
makes at you. It's people telling you. So, so the idea that he is so hyper sensitive
to criticism. I don't know how you can live to be age 12 in the internet era without having
a thick skin about people calling you all sorts of names. The fact that this person
lived to adulthood
and lived in the public eye and ran an internet company,
one of the biggest names online,
and was not used to trolls or whatever.
And so to the point that this incredibly mild criticism
just sets them all off.
Even now, you've told me every detail of the history,
I still can't wrap my head
around it.
I think it's because derangement is progressive and the pace at which it proceeds is accelerated
by your access to power. Because that, number one, it removes your accountability.
And it's kind of like how if you only ever encounter cocaine at parties, you might do
cocaine at a couple of parties.
But if you have a big bag of cocaine, you will go from when I do cocaine, I do a line
of it to I am doing cocaine every hour of every day until my heart explodes, right?
Because you just, and that, I think power,
like number one, there actually is some
like psychological science behind this.
Like power is addictive in ways that you can see
if you just look at the trajectory of a guy like Elon Musk.
But it also like, I think this amount of wealth and power,
I think Winnig becomes less rational
every month that he is doing this, right?
And I think that is true of a lot of people.
If they don't have,
I think there are ways to protect yourself from this.
One of the ways that you can protect
your whole organization from this
is by having safeguards and structures in it
that are meant to add accountability
and check power of even the executives, right? Like when you actually have functional safeguards and structures in it that are meant to add accountability and check power of even
the executives, right? Like when you actually have functional safeguards, it reduces the degree that
you get deranged like this, but eBay clearly doesn't have anything like that set up. And so
Winning is just, and everyone below him is just spiraling, you know? That's really what this story
is about. And we'll talk more about their spiraling, but first listen to our sponsor, Spiral, on the ads.
This summer, a lone gunman on a rooftop reminded us
that American presidents have long been
the targets of assassins.
Nearly 50 years ago, President Gerald Ford faced
two attempts on his life in less than three weeks.
A woman fired a shot at President Ford.
President Gerald R. Ford came stunningly close to being the victor.
A woman dressed in a long red skirt pointed a 45 caliber pistol at the president.
These are the only two times we know of that a woman has tried to assassinate a U.S. president.
And the two assassins had never met.
One was a protege of infamous cult leader Charles Manson.
She is 26-year-old Lynette Alice Fromm, nicknamed Squeaky.
I always felt like Lynette was kind of his right-hand woman.
The other, a middle-aged housewife working undercover for the FBI in the violent revolutionary
underground.
Identified by police as Sarah Jane Moore.
Sarah Jane could enter
into these areas that other people couldn't. A spy, basically. The story of
one strange and violent summer. This season on Rip Current. Listen to Rip
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Should we wake her up?
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What was that?
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I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
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We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
We're back. So a month or two after Steve Weimer,
chief of communications,
talks like sends that message to some of his employees
about going crazy on Ina's ass.
In August 1st of 2019,
the New York Times published an article
about a lawsuit eBay had filed against Amazon for unlawfully poaching sellers.
In Ina's coverage of this article,
she wrote about Winnig saying that he has quote,
been unable to stop a decline in market sales and that his plan to staunch the bleeding by suing Amazon may not be the best tactic.
Again, she's a very
modestly spoken person, not a firebrand, but Winnig
is-
Almost to a comical degree. Like every quote you read from her, it's-
Yeah, it's remarkable. But Winnig, hearing this very reasonable statement, immediately
texts Steve Weimer saying, Ina is out with a hot piece on the litigation. If we are ever
going to take her down, now is the time.'"
Why?
Why is now the time?
How is that going to help you, Devin?
Devin Winnig?
So you should note here that Winnig
does not order his underlings
or anyone else to commit a crime.
He just says,
"'If we're going to take her out, we should do it now, right?
And Winnig's successful defense of himself in this case
hinges a lot on that.
Now, Weimer, his communications guy, who is, I should note,
the son and grandson of Baptist pastors,
that's gonna be relevant in a second,
repeats Winnig's statement to Bog.
Like, Weimer after Winnig says this,
if we're gonna take her out, we gotta do it now,
Weimer messages Jim Bog and says this,
hatred is a sin, I am very sinful.
Bog responds, let me ask you this,
do we need her entire site shut down?
I'm not fucking around here anymore.
And Weimer responds, amen, I want her done.
Bog says, so and so, that part is censored,
said to burn her to the ground, correct.
And Weimer responds, she is a biased troll
who needs to get all caps burned down.
These are, we have like direct copies of the text messages.
So it sounds like, you know, Weimer said,
hey, Winnig says we can take her down now.
And then he starts doing all this biblical shit.
Hatred's a sin and I'm very sinful,
but we're going after her now.
We're gonna burn her down.
And again, if your boss is messaging you stuff like this,
it's time to get another job.
Like, because you're going to get deposed
about what he's asking you to do.
Unless he's talking about, yes, let's go to legal
and see if we can get a cease and desist
because we think these claims are libelous or whatever.
Yeah.
Because I get it, some corporate people use language
like they're talking about going to war,
we're gonna destroy them, we're gonna burn it.
But what they mean is we're gonna call,
we're gonna get a conference call with the legal team
and ask if we can send a mean letter on lawyer letterhead
and see if that'll scare her into shutting off her website.
Like they use, the language they use
did not, you know, wouldn't necessarily convey to,
let's send her a bloody pig mask.
Spoiler alert.
Yeah, for where this is heading.
So Bogg does a yes and to Weimer's,
like we need to burn her down.
And it's like, okay, I'm gonna execute plan B.
And Weimer promises Bogg,
I will manage any bad fallout, right?
Now this conversation seems to be the first time
that Bogg laid out to a superior his theory
that the Fido master account was either run by Ina's wife
or Ina's husband, David Steiner,
or quote, another close associate. And he then lied about the success
of the catfishing attempt
that his employees had already botched.
Telling Weimer, we have further reason to believe
he, Fido master, is either her husband
or another close associate.
I've been communicating with him every day.
I told him I have an incriminating video
that he needs to see.
He bit on it, hook, line and sinker.
I wanna leave it at a hotel concierge for him.
If I can get him to pick it up, his ass is mine.
It is not, and like he didn't.
At no point was he ever following along with this.
Bogg is just kind of lying to his boss
to pump up his own competence.
But the fact that Weimer is like,
yep, this seems like a good plan.
This seems like a thing eBay should be doing.
Again, he's like a good plan. This seems like a thing eBay should be doing. Again, he's directly under Winnig.
So in early August, Ena published yet another article
about Winnig's ever-increasing salary.
The article was again, a perfectly normal example
of a reporting, but eBay leadership treated it
like a death threat.
Winnig, who I should note, this very year, 2019,
was voted number 100 on Forbes's list
of America's
most innovative leaders, sent out an email to his C-suite executives demanding answers
to the crucial emergency of an old lady and her husband writing blog posts. Per CBS News.
I have a question. At this point, does she even know they're mad at them? I know she knows that
some weirdo spray painted something on her garage, it was inscrutable.
But does she even know that they're even reading her website?
She knows they're reading her website
because she's influential in the industry.
She has sources who work at eBay who feed her info.
So she's aware that her stuff is red.
Yeah.
But she has no idea that any of this is going on.
Yeah, because why would you ever think?
No one would assume this.
This is crazy.
And I'm going to, for what happens next, I'm going to quote from CBS News is right up
here.
eBay's chief communications officer, Steve Weimer, wrote back, we are going to crush
this lady.
About a month later, Winnick, the CEO of eBay, texted, take her down.
Prosecutors say Steve Weimer later texted eBay security director Jim Bogg,
I want to see ashes as long as it takes whatever it takes. Which is a little further than like
using a war metaphor, right? Now Bogg sweating over Elliott management scrutiny of corporate
operations and eager to justify the expenses of his branch of the company leapt into action. He shared Weimer's, I want to see ashes message
with his deputy, David Harville,
and added, I've been ordered to find and destroy.
Now, all of this is really bad stuff to have in writing
if you are planning to commit a bunch of crimes,
but they apparently don't teach you that in the CIA.
Despite the graffiti, stalking, and phishing attempts,
neither the Steiners nor FidoMaster
had stopped their dastardly behavior of writing mean things about eBay.
In email conversations, Winig, Weimer, and Bogg lost their minds over the fact that Twitter
refused to remove FidoMaster's account after they complained about it.
Finally, Weimer concluded an early August email by saying, This issue gives me ulcers, harms employee morale,
and trickles into everything about our brand.
I genuinely believe these people are acting out of malice,
and anything, all caps, we can do to solve it should be explored.
Somewhere, at some point, someone chose to let this slide.
It has grown to a point that is absolutely unacceptable.
It's the blind eye towards graffiti that turns into mayhem syndrome,
and I'm sick about it.
Whatever. Period. It. Period. Takes. Period.
So at this point, Bogg has been told several times,
do literally anything to stop these people.
And he decides, he responds by asking,
do I have permission to neutralize Ina's website?
I think I can do it in two weeks or less.
And Weimer again responds by saying, whatever it takes.
So what Bogg takes from this is that
I should sign the Steiner's personal email accounts up
for a bunch of porn newsletters.
And other newsletters as well.
He sends them up for Sin City Fetish Night,
the Satanic Temples newsletter,
and the Communist Party newsletter for some reason.
And then Bogg's chief aide, Mrs. Popp, posts the Steiner's home address on Twitter.
This is the point at which the Steiner's may start to realize something's weird, like how
do people have our address, what the hell is going on, but again, probably just think
it's trolls.
They don't recognize, certainly, that all of these trolls are just one or two people
at eBay operating a bunch of burner
accounts.
So, Mrs. Poff.
If somebody signed me up for a bunch of newsletters and mailing lists, I would not notice whatsoever.
That public Gmail I use or the public inbox is just an ocean of every bot.
So suddenly I'm getting something like the whatever they signed them up for, a bunch
of porn stuff or whatever.
I did just like, yeah, that's what my inbox looks like.
Yeah, that's another normal day.
Yeah.
There is this actually less porn spam
than what I had last week.
All right, we're getting better.
Yeah, like every red-blooded American,
my email inbox is a mix of porn spam
and price alerts on ammo.
So yeah, like that's just kind of the norm.
So Ms. Pop, who gets really into her job
stalking these people,
sets up a burner account with a profile picture of a skull
and pretends to be an eBay seller
who is angry at Ina Steiner for hurting his business.
She messages a bunch and Ina, being intelligent,
ignores the messages until Pop writes,
I guess I'm going to have to get your attention another way, bitch.
What followed is described later in the court case against Bog, Pop, and the rest of the
eBay Skullduggery team as ordering, quote,
unwanted and scary items and services to the Steiner's home and ordering items intended
to embarrass the Steiner's to their neighbors addresses. Now that leaves out a
lot of context and in an interview with CBS News, Ena elaborates, quote,
somebody left a voicemail for us saying they couldn't fulfill the order for a
wet specimen and David was the one who called and he said what is a wet
specimen and and it was a pig fetus.
That's when I really, my heart sank because I thought, who might be angry at
something I wrote and I couldn't figure it out.
I mean, we were, we were desperately trying to think who could it be because
you would never guess it's the CEO of eBay through a complicated process.
Whose underlings are sending me a pig fetus.
Cause only a crazy person would assume that.
And also that this guy thinks it's like in a horror movie where the box is going to show
up on the door and she's going to open it up and there's just going to be like a dead
slimy pig fetus in there, where in reality it's like, well, no, there's all sorts of
procedures specifically to stop this from happening.
Because of course every weirdo is trying to send his ex wife a pig fetus.
Like the company that sells that stuff to whatever science classrooms, whatever.
Like, yeah, that's like 40% of their orders, I'm sure, is weirdos
trying to send it to an enemy.
So yeah, they've got a thing where they're going to call the recipient and say,
hey, you know, we've got a procedure for shipping these. Do you have a lab or whatever?
Right. And do you want to pig feed us? Yeah.
Do you actually want to pig feed us or are you one of the most of our orders where some
freak trying to send it to somebody they're angry at?
It does show the very like Hollywood movie understanding of how reality works, where it's like,
yeah, we'll just have a pig fetus mailed to them.
We're like, no, that's not how these work.
Someone is going to contact them to ask
if they want to take delivery of like dead animal parts.
Like they don't just drop that off in front of your house
in an unmarked package.
You have to do that yourself
if you wanna mail people dead animal bits.
Trust me, I have done it
Anyway, I did Jason one time from a fan receive an enormous pint glass filled with like penis stones
From like animals that get like built calcium build-ups inside their urinary tracts. There's like an elephant one in there
That's the size of like a fucking almost the size of a a pool cue. So
But that was someone who liked me. I don't know why they sent that but it's nice to have
Yeah to be clear
There's nothing I could receive in a package that would make me think somebody hated me if somebody sent me a dead rat
I'd immediately think yeah, I think I think I put this in a book
This must be a reference to something that happened in one of the books. It's clearly a fan.
Yeah, it's probably a fan.
It's somebody, last Christmas, sent me some cookies
and I ate them.
Like, eh, it's probably fine.
Like, they surely don't want me dead.
They probably love me.
It's hard to poison people.
Yeah.
Yeah, so no, I didn't think twice about it.
No.
It's just so strange.
Ina, you know, they're just kind of baffled by the pig fetus thing.
But then on August 10th at 4 p.m., a package containing a pig mask, mask soaked in blood
arrives at the Steiner house.
They received a Twitter DM minutes later in all caps saying, do I have your retention
now?
Now, the good news is that David and Ina had called the police to make a report
about the weird shit that they were receiving
and an officer is on site as the pig mask arrives.
So I can tell you from experience,
having both had to report to police
when I have gotten death threats
and who have tried to walk people through it
when they have been stalked
by different kind of terrorist groups,
it can be hard to get police to take cases like this seriously, online stalking and harassment
often sounds like a joke until it isn't.
The Steiners are kind of lucky in that
there is an officer on scene when they receive
the package with this mask and the Twitter message
and the cop both sees that as it's happening
and he like sees how scared they are
and immediately is like,
oh, this is probably a serious issue.
Like this is actually something
that we might need to deal with.
So they get kind of lucky there.
And the police start working, you know, to their credit
they actually are really on the ball in this specific case.
And while they did that,
Bog and his team escalated their attacks
on the Steiner family,
livid to the point of insanity that for all this,
they still hadn't stopped blogging.
So Bog sends the Steiners a copy of a book titled,
Grief Diaries, Surviving the Loss of a Spouse.
And then he sends them a funeral wreath.
Both Steiners at this point take this as a death threat.
And they, do you give you an idea?
Because it is because it is because people are messaging them saying you're going to die if you don't stop doing this
So to give you an idea of how seriously they take this they start sleeping in separate beds
So that if they're attacked in the night one of them has a chance to get away
so this is not like
Like that's at that point you're doing psychological damage to people, right?
Like this is not just like weird funny silly like harassment anymore.
This is, this is, has crossed into being a very serious crime.
Now along with the threats to life and limb came a dizzying barrage of pornography and insects.
They repeatedly sent eBay repeatedly or
security people at eBay
repeatedly sent copies of a barely legal edition of Hustler that was like just turned 18
Look at this hot barely 18 girl, right?
And they mailed it not to the Steiners but to their neighbors but addressed to David Steiner
I think to try and convince his wife that he was looking at barely legal pornography, but didn't know his own home address?
I'm not really sure how she hoped this, or maybe to convince the neighbors of the Steiners
that David was into barely legal pornography.
It's a little unclear to me how the best case scenario for this caper.
Yeah, it's supposed to like embarrass them with the neighbors.
And I'm just imagining a husband and wife at the neighbor's house. And the woman is like, Oh my gosh, this, I think the, the guy, the man living next door, I think he might be looking at pornography. And the dude just like, yes, that is a shocking thing to accuse a man of.
thing to accuse a man of. I have had a neighbor admit to me to being in devour, which is like porn of like being
an animal that's eaten by other anthropomorphic animals.
Like, this is the 18 year old barely legal issue of hustler does not even like, does
not cross the boundary of being like, I would be worried if a neighbor got this at their
house.
The freakiest part is that he's still doing
like analog magazine porn.
That's like the most pervert thing I can imagine.
You paid like $8 for a, it's got like 23 photos in it.
Yeah.
Like, all right.
David, could you come over here?
We're not angry, we're not angry.
But I just wanted to, do you know about the internet?
Can I walk you through this thing?
Cause there's a lot of options besides having
a Hustler magazine mailed to your house today actually.
Yeah, anyway, it doesn't work,
but you know what does work Jason?
Advertising, theoretically.
Anyway, here's ads.
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And we're back.
So in addition to copies of the barely legal issue
of Hustler,
Bogg's team starts mailing fly larvae, live spiders,
and boxes of cockroaches to the Steiner home.
Now, at this point, the police set up cameras to surveil like what's happening, you know,
for obvious reasons, but this only provides them footage at first with bewildered delivery
drivers shipping out insects, porn, and funeral supplies.
Online, Ms. Pop continued
her harassment of Ina, as this section from the New York Times describes. The Twitter bombardment
began to hint at violence. When you hurt our business, you hurt our families. People will do
anything to protect family! Again, not even clear, because they're not highlighting this article you did hurt my business,
because Ina's articles are not damaging the business
of random eBay people, right?
So all of this is just completely incomprehensible.
And one of the things that is noted
in that New York Times article is that
while all of these unhinged messages
and packages are being sent to the Steiners,
on his own Twitter account, Mr. Weimer evoked Fred Rogers.
He said a movie about the inspirational TV personality
made him cry, and he once retweeted Mr. Rogers' line that,
"'If there's anything that bothers me,
it's one person demeaning another.'"
But inside eBay, Mr. Weimer was goading the harassment on.
I want to see ashes, he told Mr. Baugh on August 11th.
As long as it takes, whatever it takes.
Mr. Baugh shared the message with his deputy, David Harville, adding, I've been ordered
to find and destroy.
The next escalation in eBay's war on the Steiner's was to fly Bog and one of his analysts,
Ms. Z, first class to Boston where the Steiners lived.
They checked in at the Ritz and drove to the Steiners' home
to install a GPS device on their car.
Alas, Bog's CIA techniques were stymied
by the unforeseeable fact that the Steiners
used their garage as a garage.
They were not prepared for this.
Who would be?
Planting a GPS device on someone's car
because they wrote criticisms of eBay is a crime on its own.
But Bogg knows the key to being a good criminal
is to never just commit a couple of crimes at once.
You want to max out your crime yield
so that the police get overwhelmed
by the density of illegality and shut down, right?
That's how you beat the cops,
is you just commit so many crimes.
I mean, that's the Trump method.
It does actually work for some people, yes.
Jim's just a little bit below that level of wealth
that he can't quite make it.
So Jim buys a crowbar to break into the Steiner's garage.
Alas for him and his team, they get spotted by the cops
who at this point had set up surveillance of the Steiner
home. And they hear through this Gilbert, the police captain
they're working with on the ground in Boston, hears through
an internet feed of the local police radio that like the
police are going to send a team over to the Steiner house. So
they decide to stop temporarily their physical acts against
Steiner property. But they did decide to stop temporarily their physical acts against Steiner property
But they did decide to order $70 worth of pizza from a 24-hour pizzeria and have it sent to the Steiners at 430 in the morning
So for the next couple of days they continue with this juvenile shit
They put up advertisements for estate sales at the Steiner residence
They put up like a Craigslist post advertising a swinger party there and say,
ring the doorbell any time of day or night,
which shows a real, swinger parties don't work like that.
You don't just see a Craigslist for a random sex party
at a person you don't know's house and just show up.
Maybe people did before HIV,
but that is not the way the world works anymore primarily.
What was, I never, and the stuff I read, I never understood what was the end goal of
trying to put the tracker on the vehicle.
What was, what was the point of that?
What were they trying to find out or what?
I think they were trying to get proof that Ina was traveling to meet with Phytomaster.
And they were hoping that they would find her drive to him and then they could prove who
Fido master was and bring down their whole criminal enterprise of being mean about eBay on the internet
Hmm I I don't I don't have a way to make it make better sense to you than that
Because they he booked a flight to go do this like Like that's a meeting, that's a discussion,
that's a paper trail that we're going here to do.
We have goals we're to accomplish with this trip.
And what they did once they were there,
I'm not saying that they didn't have a plan.
It's just, I can't figure out what the plan was.
Because again, all of this, I assume,
is just to try to intimidate this couple
into taking their website down.
But so far, you've not even made it clear
that that's what you want them to do.
Yeah, you're just trying to scare them away from posting,
but at no point have they received like a set of demands.
Because I think they-
No, like you sent me a box of bugs,
and you want me to piece together what I'm supposed to-
What am I supposed to do as a result of these bugs?
Which of my activities do you want me to stop
or do you think I need bugs?
Or which specific, like you've not made it clear,
you're implying that a specific person,
cause again, they're not saying,
Hey, we're here from eBay.
No.
It's kind of implied this is on behalf of somebody else.
So it's like, well, is there a specific article
you want me to take down?
Is there a retraction you want me to post?
I don't feel like you've given them anything actionable.
That again, this is a very,
like such a comprehensively incompetent effort.
And part of, you know,
you can really see the incompetence in the fact that so, while
they're kind of waiting around, they get scared off from breaking into the garage, but they
keep showing up and doing physical surveillance of the property because they don't have any
better ideas while they're doing this kind of petty harassment.
And one day when they drive, when they're like stalking them in a rental car, David
Steiner gets a photo out of his window of their rental car and he sends it to the police.
And the next time they show up, an obvious undercover police car is parked out by the
house.
Now, if I were doing this for some reason, I would be like, oh shit, we've been made.
We should probably stop doing this, right?
The police are taking this seriously and we clearly don't know what we're doing.
But Boggs sends a WhatsApp message to his colleagues gloating,
they're seeing ghosts now, LOL.
We've trapped them into having the police out in front of their house.
They're so scared and all we did was threaten to murder them.
We've got them jumping in shadows.
Now the Steiners are not seeing ghosts.
They are seeing obvious criminal activity and the police have seen that activity now too
and filmed it several times.
A Natick detective who's trying to,
Natick is like the suburb or whatever of Boston
where this is all happening,
figures out what's going on
and he tracks the payment for the pizzas
that had been sent to the Steiner's house
because they had to pay for some of them.
And they found out that the pizzas had been paid for
with a gift debit card purchased in Silicon Valley within a couple miles of
eBay corporate headquarters.
The rental cars were also traced directly back to Bogg's team who were all eBay employees.
Bogg, the CIA man, had taken virtually no precautions to protect their identity.
From the New York Times, quote,
on August 21st, the detective showed up
at the Ritz-Carlton to see Ms. Z.
After Ms. Z dodged him, the detective called her phone
as Mr. Bog was hustling her to the airport.
Mr. Bog answered, pretended he was her husband
and played dumb.
Ms. Z's flight was not for hours,
so they got a hotel room at the airport to hide out.
Mr. Bog sat on the couch and played a clip from the 2003 comedy Old School, in which
a husband answers the door to a fellow who says, I'm here for the gangbang.
He kept watching it over and over and laughing, telling Ms. Z to lighten up.
I feel like some listeners, because of the nature of this show, are waiting for us to
get to the point where the eBay executives have this couple killed.
We never get there.
If the story had just been this person wrote a bunch of stuff that eBay thought was financially
damaging and they had hired a hitman to have them murdered, I wouldn't have brought the
story to you because that's the kind of thing you think goes on.
This is so stupid and juvenile and weird.
That's what draw me to the story.
Because it's not that what they did is,
this is not the most evil thing we've heard of a corporation.
We talk about genocide on this show, but it is,
I think it is illustrative of a thought process
that in other organizations does lead to worse things.
Like this kind of escalation of derangement
and escalation of force is not irrelevant
if you're kind of concerned about how people with power
use it to hurt other people.
This is just a particularly absurd example of that,
I think is a good way to look at it.
There's so many things at play here
because there's just the corporate culture
and there's this weird group think
and there's this way these guys are all egging each other on
and the way the paranoia,
the type of corporate paranoia that you see with Elon Musk.
Right, right.
He seems convinced that every rando on Twitter
is capable of taking him down.
That guy was posting the location of his private plane.
He's like, well, they're trying to get me killed.
They're trying to assassinate me.
And it's this weird type of madness
that people who are not acclimated to Twitter, I guess,
or to the internet somehow, It's a type of madness.
And I'm fascinated by this because the outcome
is exactly, plays exactly the way if there was like
a Danny McBride movie about this type of thing happening.
He would be the perfect guy to cast as Jim in this.
Where the guy's like evil, but also dumb,
and he's not harmless.
But like if they had broken into that garage
and if she had caught them in the garage,
I don't know what would have happened.
The guy was gonna go in with a crowbar.
He probably had a gun.
We have to assume this guy probably carries a gun
with him all.
He's got a police captain with him too.
So that guy could have had a piece, you know?
And he's, you know, and he thinks he's been given blank check
to burn this person down.
Like anything, anything in all caps
being said over and over again, you do anything.
That's so weird.
It's so weird.
I do think you actually nailed the casting though.
Danny McBride is exactly who you'd want for this.
Oh, I've been picturing him all along.
Everything this guy, everything he says,
like the way he's so over the top dramatic
and takes himself so seriously. But there's such, like the way he's so over the top, dramatic and takes himself so seriously.
But there's such, like every idea he has is like,
as some people describe Danny McBride's acting,
it's like a child suddenly in an adult's body.
Yeah.
And it is like that, right?
Where like, you have been caught by the cops,
you are now subject to a serious criminal investigation
and you are just playing the same clip from old school
over and over again as you hide in a hotel.
Like-
And laughing and laughing.
You worked for the CIA.
Anyway, once it became clear
that they were now the ones being watched,
Bogg had his people embark on a half-assed coverup.
He gave orders for his team to try.
Again, the way it places his brain goes are marvelous.
So he knows they've been blown up.
He knows that the cops are looking at
who was ordering these pizzas
and who is operating this burner account
that's actually making the threats.
Because clearly that person is involved in the deliveries
because the threats are time with the deliveries.
Now, because the fake name Ms. Popp had used for that burner account was a Samoan name,
Jim Boggs says, you need to go find a Samoan that we can blame for all this.
That'll throw him off the case.
Now, my favorite of Boggs' CIA specials was his attempt to have his team make fake dossiers
Slandering the Steiners and hand those over to the police from the US Attorney's charging document honor about August 15th 2019
Boggs directed stock well by a whatsapp message to prepare an eBay person of interest report that listed the Steiners as eBay's top
persons of interest
Boggs wrote in the narrative
I need you to write that they have made direct threats to eBay,
eBay CEO and our employees, in parentheses, make it up.
This is where I said, just lie about them.
Just lie about them.
Pretend they're our top threats.
Puts that in writing.
Yeah, brilliant.
Now, while they're trying to cover up
an ongoing criminal investigation,
Stephanie Popp continued
harassing the Steiners on Twitter.
On the night of August 21st, she used three separate Twitter accounts she had created
the night before to fake a public conversation about the Steiners' many crimes.
One account asked another for Ina Steiners' home address.
The other account posted it, while the other replied, guess I have to pay Ina Steiner's home address. The other account posted it while the other replied, "'Guess I have to pay Ina a visit.'
Pop forwarded the tweets that she had just written
to Bog, her boss, and Gilbert, the retired police captain,
and wrote, Ina's really bringing out
some angry Twitter users."
One of the mysteries here is like,
what's going on with you, Stephanie?
Like, are you really angling for a promotion
because you are putting way too much effort into this job?
And again, where's the same,
where's the voice of reason
anywhere in the vicinity of this?
That voice bounced a while back.
Not to say, hey, what we're doing is wrong,
but to say, hey, what we're doing is wrong, but to say, hey, what we're doing is only,
this only ends one way with multiple ones of us
going to jail.
Like you understand, even,
I don't care how mad you are at this lady,
like what we're doing is not gonna be effective.
It's not going to accomplish our goals as a corporation.
That's the thing.
Not even like what we're doing is wrong,
but just like, this is clearly not worked.
We have gone as far as we can go
without committing violence and it has not dissuaded them.
And also now the cops are investigating.
Stop tweeting about them.
Stop tweeting threats to them.
But the same day that Pop fakes that Twitter conversation,
Bogg has Gilbert execute what he called
their White Knight strategy,
which is their last ditch attempt to deflect blame
for what they'd done.
In this, they have eBay, another chunk of the company,
contact the Steiners to offer help
about their ongoing harassment problems,
and also reach out as eBay to the cops and say,
hey, we can help you with this investigation if you want.
Genius.
So Gilbert is the guy who sits down with the cops
because he's a former police captain
and he claims falsely not to know any members
of the eBay security team, that the cops know by name
and know by name we're stalking the Steiners.
When Gilbert learns that Natick police are investigating
that prepaid debit card, he tells Bog
and Bog orders the team to cook up a list
of eBay persons of interest in the Bay
that they could pin the crime on.
Basically anyone in Silicon Valley
who's been mean at us on the internet,
we can try and make it look like they sent the pizzas
to these random couple in Boston.
Very believable.
Gilbert dutifully handed over this list of persons
of interest to the Natick police,
who then interrogated him and another eBay employee
about Stephanie Popp and Veronica Zee.
Gilbert claimed that Popp had ordered Zee
to investigate the Steiner's on her own.
So at this point, he's trying to throw them under the bus
and make it look like it's just these two crazy gals, right?
Pop does not help.
But this is where you should be at this point.
Right.
Where everyone in eBay should be as like,
okay, how do I make it look like I had nothing to do
with this and then someone else goes down for this?
Right, right.
And obviously, Pop especially is out of pocket on this,
but they didn't start this, right?
Now, Pop does not help her case though
by continuing to harass the Steiners through Twitter,
posting this on August 22nd,
the day Gilbert met with the Natick police.
And she like cites their newsletter's Twitter account,
20 years of lies and destroying families.
Don't be proud of that, you worthless bitch.
I will destroy your family and business too.
See how you like it.
And then in another message,
when are we gonna visit her in NADIC?
Question mark, question mark, question mark.
And she spells all of this in just the,
a way people don't actually even type on the internet, but I feel like that's almost punching down
at this point.
Now, by this stage in the degradation of this whole case,
what's happening has finally reached eBay's legal team.
And these are finally, the first time anyone at eBay
who is an intelligent person finds out what Jim
and his team have been doing at the, we'll say suggestion, maybe, but not in a
legally binding way of the CEO.
And eBay's lawyers go, what the fuck?
You have been doing what?
How much money would you pay to be able to magically transport yourself to the room in
the moment they found out fully what
had been happening.
Priceless.
Just beautiful.
Yeah.
The looks on their faces.
I would sell my house to be able to go just see them, see this room full of lawyers for
this whatever $20 billion corporation and have it explained fully what exactly had been
done including with emails.
You sent them spiders?
Expensed rental cars, flights.
Yeah.
You had a cop spray paint what on their house?
Oh man.
Because you thought what? Because explain to me again why you thought this was, oh Jesus, I can't.
The legal team starts to shit bricks and they also start asking questions of Bog and Bog
panics and he calls Weimer who is the communications secretary.
He's the one step down from the CEO, right?
He's the guy that Winig is usually complaining to,
and he's Boggs' like person of contact on the C-suite.
So Jim leaves this message on Weimer's cell phone
after the lawyers reach out to him.
Hi, Weimer, this is Jim Boggs' personal self.
My team ran an op on our friend in Boston.
Nothing illegal occurred,
and we were actually intending to team up with her
and get her on our side in a positive manner.
However, small town police got a couple rental car plates and tracked it back to my people and the hotel we were staying at.
They sent a note to eBay Investigations who then passed it to legal and they are conducting an internal investigation on us.
We are cooperating, but I know they realize something is off.
We will continue to cooperate, but not sure how long we can keep this up.
If there is any way to get some top cover,
that would be great.
If not, I just wanted you to have a head up
because they are aware that multiple members of our team
are not a fan of that website
to include David and his wife.
Again, no crime was committed
and the local police don't have a case.
I don't want our legal team to give them one.
Let me know if you wanna discuss this weekend.
You wanna get that message from your senior? Again, can't emphasize enough.
No crimes were committed.
We wanted to get them on our side with the spiders that we sent them.
The level of sophistication where he thinks,
I know what's going to throw the cops off.
I'm going to send a message stating that we didn't do a crime.
No crimes were committed.
Yeah.
Amazing.
They will cancel the investigation when they hear that.
Yeah.
Oh no, guys, no, no.
He said they didn't do any crimes.
Yeah.
We owe him an apology.
I just heard the message.
No, he said they didn't.
Yeah.
We repeatedly said no crimes were committed.
Could not have been clear about that.
Now from this point on, the game was up.
A flurry of deletions of text messages followed,
right alongside messages from the company legal counsel,
not to do that please, for the love of God,
don't delete your messages, that will just make all this
worse, please stop committing crimes.
Now, Mr. Winnig, the CEO, had been smart enough to avoid giving any direct orders to carry
out illegal acts in a way that we can prove, or at least he had been vague enough to give
his extremely expensive lawyers the wiggle room they needed.
I have no evidence that he committed any kind of crime.
He has not been convicted of a crime.
I have no evidence that he personally had anything deleted.
He was, however, implicated in aspects of the breaking scandal
in a way that I think we have adequately laid out here.
Right?
And so when all of this comes out
and this starts becoming the news articles that you read
and then sent me a message saying
you should do this as an episode,
it has become clear to everybody,
Devin Winnig can't stay CEO of eBay.
He resigns later that same month
with an exit pay package of $57 million.
Fair salary for good work.
You know?
You wasted a shitload of the company money on a bar.
You lost a bunch of market share to Amazon.
You presided over a company where the security guy carried out a spider crime
Then you get 57 million to leave nice work if you can get it
To be clear even if his role in all of this had been to not even know about the blog
lady and to simply be
know about the blog lady and to simply be oblivious to what his security team was doing in his name, that would be enough to get him fired.
Right?
Yes, you would think so.
Without the $57 million, in my opinion.
So we don't get sued.
He doesn't get fired.
He resigns and he says that I'm not on the same page as the board.
Right? Legally, this is not firing. and he says that I'm not on the same page as the board, right?
Legally, this is not firing. Do I think that what happened was the rich guy version
of getting fired?
Sure, but not in a way that he can sue me over saying.
Cause Devin Winnick seems like he might be kind of the guy
who does some suing.
Maybe not now.
Lay low, Devin.
That's a good advice for all you Devins out there
listening right now, by the way.
Always lay low if you're a Devin.
Anyway, Mr. Weimer, who is one step below Winnick,
gets caught, he stays working for eBay for like another year,
but he is the one that we know deleted a bunch of messages.
And specifically, he deleted messages
between himself and Bog.
And who knows what those messages may or may not
have implicated him or Winig in.
But Weimer is fired after this becomes clear.
And obviously massively disgraced.
He never has another, oh no, sorry.
He went on to run the boys and girls club of Silicon Valley.
My bad.
That's fine.
That's probably the guy you want molding young minds though, right?
Seems like he'd be good at that.
He claims that he had no point, no idea what Bog was really doing until the story broke,
which I don't consider very credible.
But again, he is not criminally convicted of anything.
Bog and five other employees are initially charged
with cyber stalking and a couple of other different crimes
like interfering with an investigation.
Some of the people charged, like Ms. Z,
are temporary employees who also immediately lose their job
with no severance in addition to becoming
functionally unemployable
just as their careers are getting started.
And it's these young women that I actually do feel bad for.
They did get caught up to a degree where like,
you should have known better,
but they were very young, much younger than Bog,
then certainly the C-Sweets at this company.
And it sucks that they're the ones
who suffer the most from this, right?
Because they are seriously fucked as a result of all this.
And they're not the ones that I think most of the blame
should actually land on,
but that is where most of the blame lands.
Now, the attention drawn to the case
ensures that there are further charges.
In July of 2020, almost a year after the story broke,
another eBay employee, Philip Cook,
is also charged with cyber-stalking.
Cook is a retired, decorated police captain,
the second police, former police officer involved in this series of crimes in addition to the CIA
man. Cook had gotten- Yeah, no comment.
Huh? No comment. I said no comment.
Yeah. Yeah. And he had been one of these guys who got bored in retirement, decided to take private
security jobs in the tech industry.
He was brought on as senior manager of security operations for eBay's global security team
working directly under Jim Bog.
His salary was $185,000 a year.
If you are wondering what $185,000 buys you in terms of actual work, here's a summary
of his activities during the height of Bog's's criminality, written by Ars Technica.
Cook left for a trip to Asia, Europe,
and the Middle East on August 8th, 2019.
While overseas, where he was traveling alone,
Mr. Cook drank heavily, the sentencing memorandum said.
On August 20th, 2019, while in India,
Mr. Cook saw and responded to a draft Twitter message
from Gilbert, that's the other former police guy,
to which he acquiesced with a thumbs up emoji
and later assented to a plan to use multiple accounts to send the message string with a
copy all.
At this time, Cook was unaware that his co-conspirators had attempted surveillance in Massachusetts,
and he was not aware that colleagues might have engaged in role play at the victim's
house or directed creation of fake person of interest reports to conceal their activities,
the memorandum said.
So Cook's defense, you know, as being clearly implicated in all of this illegality and in
the planning stages of it is I was drunk and I didn't know that they were doing anything.
Right?
Solid plan.
I was drunk on the other side of the planet.
Right.
Right.
Now he would also claim it sentencing that the drinking company culture at eBay had led
him to develop a problem and that the poor judgment that resulted from this was part
of what had happened.
And I don't think that's entirely unfair because Cook claimed that drinking on the job at eBay
was common and a lot of the decisions here do make sense if you add alcohol, right?
There's a lot of drunk energy too, yeah.
Yes.
I don't think he's entirely lying here.
Cook though does make claims
that I think were entirely attempts to protect himself.
For example, he was found to have deleted
numerous messages with his boss
related to the criminal schemes that Bogg had cooked up.
In court, Cook claimed he deleted those emails
because Bogg just sent him so much crazy shit, he assumed
it was all jokes.
This does not hold up in court.
Ultimately, Cook and six other eBay employees, including Bog, pled guilty to a variety of
charges.
This included the two members of the senior team, the senior security team who get convicted
are Bog and Cook.
There are two members of the executive leadership team, Weimer and Winnig, who are
implicated but not charged. Of the people who are convicted, Bogg receives the toughest
sentence, 57 months in prison. David Harville, eBay's former global resiliency director,
gets 24 months. Stephanie Popp is handed a little over a year. Former police captain
Brian Gilbert has pled guilty and not yet been sentenced,
while Philip Cook got 18 months in federal prison and three years of house arrest. eBay
agreed to pay $3 million in order to defer prosecution. Now, I will say that seems like
a slap on the wrist from eBay, who I think is more responsible than $3 million of this.
They pay the $3 million to the couple?
I think it's a mix of that and like, you know,
honestly, Jason, I will cut in here when I find that out.
I should have checked on that.
I think it's some of its damages and some of its like fines,
but it is worth noting that litigation is ongoing.
They will probably wind up paying.
They will certainly settle for more.
This is the result of the criminal investigation.
Ina and David Steiner are suing eBay,
as well as Devin Winig and Steve Weimer.
They're suing the other people who were all convicted too.
And I think there's a good chance,
they are certainly going to settle for something there.
Right?
Like the Steiner's are going to do well out of this.
I'm going to make a prediction that the amount that they settle for
will be much less than the $57 million that that guy got.
That was the number, wasn't it?
Yes, 57 million was Winig's exit package.
And Winig, in case you're worried about our buddy Devon,
is just fine.
He is on the board of General Motors to this day
and is a director at Cruise Automation,
the autonomous vehicle company.
In June of 2021, he was named
to the Salesforce global advisory board.
So it's good to know Devin's still doing great.
I'm sure he is utilizing their security resources in a responsible
and legally ethical manner.
Meanwhile, somewhere I'm just imagining some eBay employee is right now getting
fired because they were caught working remote and using like a mouse jiggler to appear to be online.
And they're accused of stealing $140 worth of the company's time and will be fired with
cause and will have difficulty finding another job for months or years.
And anyway.
I love the justice system and I have no issues with any of this.
This is all, this is all capitalism working the best way it can possibly work.
No notes.
Well, here's the thing.
I know that there are people like really want to abolish the prison system.
And I get it.
It's not good at reforming people.
It doesn't do what it's supposed to do other than warehouse people for a while.
Like in theory, you cannot commit another crime while you're locked up in there unless
you're committing against your other inmates, which is exactly what happens.
But I will say that in my perfect utopian society, I do not know what I would do with
this Danny McBride ass freak who drove this whole thing.
If not prison, I don't know what you'd do with that guy.
This is all fantasy stuff,
but if I were responsible for punishments,
not just for Jim, but for guys like Devin Winnig,
it would be like you are going to have
a comfortable one bedroom apartment,
and you are going to work 40 hours a week at a job with,
you know, where you're like doing some sort of like
direct facing like customer service role, right?
Like you're gonna be working as a barista,
you're gonna be waiting tables,
you're gonna be working at a call center,
some sort of like actual job where you do something.
And you just have to do that for a period of years.
Because to a guy who gets a $57 million pay package, I can't think of a worse punishment
than having to live a normal working class life for like five years.
You have no access to your money, you have no access to your vacation homes, you just
have to work a job every day like a regular person and have no power.
I think that would be worse than them than going to club fed for a couple of years.
I really do.
Not even as a punishment,
but just to acclimate to the world you're living in
and that the rest of us live in.
Right, I think there's an actual rehabilitative aspect
to that, like some number of these people
would just stay shitty, but a couple of them,
you assume would actually realize like,
oh, these are the regular people my entire life
has been built on fucking over.
Like it might actually help, I don't know.
Not my primary reason for wanting to do it.
The flaw in our plan is that you can't do that
to their coworkers at the Starbucks they're working at
because you're inflicting them on those people
and they do not deserve that.
We would need a special government run coffee house where you know, everyone working there is a white collar criminal
Hey, you want to go to that coffee house and like spit on the former CEO of JP Morgan?
Be the worst place to get coffee. Yeah, it would be dogshit Americanos
Anyway Jason you have some books. Plug them.
Yes, the book that is out just if you're hearing this hot off the presses in the books just
a couple of weeks away, it is on September 24th. It is called I'm Starting to Worry About
This Black Box of Doom. It is not a part of any series I've ever read before. If you've
never read any of my books
This is as good a place as any to start even though it is by far the most expensive of the books because it is new
That it is up for pre-order now in every format ebook audio
hardcover if you're
If you are hearing this after September 24th It's on a shelf at a cool indie bookstore somewhere. Go buy it that way instead of getting it from Amazon.
Buy Jason's books, I always do.
And Chase, before we roll that, actually,
I should have asked you this right after we finished.
Does any of this make more sense to you?
You had asked me to do this.
Now that we've gone over,
I think everything available on this case,
does any of this make any more sense
or is it still just as much of like a mystery?
No, but I have been in times in my life, I've been in a circle of other weirdos and we've
gotten worked up about something that in retrospect, looking back, especially in my early 20s,
looking back, it's like it was somebody else.
We got really mad about somebody online or something.
In looking back, it's like, man, we had nothing else going on in our lives and we got too
worked up.
I get that dynamic, especially among a bunch of dudes or a bunch of dudes and a bunch of
young women or whatever the mix of people here was, I cannot make heads or tails of why they chose this particular person, this woman, this blogger.
I can't get there because every organization in the world, every company, every group,
every club has got somebody out there writing mildly critical stuff about them.
It's not unique. You have it wherever you go. I've had that since the late nineties. I've, you know, it's not fun
to have people criticizing you, but it's just part of being a public figure, even a minor public
figure. I can't get, I can't, I guess I would have to be in the room. I can't think of another example where this has played out this way.
Again, companies pull dirty tricks, but it's cases where they're overthrowing a government
to try to get cheaper labor on the rubber plantation.
It's not this, whatever this was.
No.
It's so weird because I have had death threats.
I've had what I thought were really unfair criticisms
of me online.
I had a guy because of who I was break my hand
at a street fight with a baton.
And like after I found out he'd lost his job in his car,
I was like, I probably don't need to keep going
after this guy.
Sounds like that's about enough, right?
Like I didn't have the, and maybe I should have,
but like I didn't have the energy to,
and that guy broke my bones.
Like I can't, I can't get in the head of this guy
going after this lady making very mild criticisms.
It's just wild.
And I get the issue with the drinking
and there being a culture of drinking at a company
that that's definitely a thing that occurs.
And I can definitely get a
bunch of dudes getting drunk and thinking it's very funny to find a website where you can order
animal fetuses and it's like, oh, let's mail her one of these. Ha ha. It's when you're on the plane
flying to her house that I think you have to wake up and think,
man, there's a record of us buying these plantations.
Have we lost our minds?
This seems like a terrible idea.
We're going to have to, we're going to trespass on her property.
We're going to put a tracker on her car and we're going to follow her around and we're
going to start intimidating.
Like we're going to, let's be clear.
Maybe you can argue that the stuff we did mailing her weird stuff is a misdemeanor. Maybe you can get
off like that's something, a chart type of charges the company can make go away. Once
you show up at somebody's house and once you've bought a crowbar to try to break into their
house, that's now real crime stuff. And then once the cops find out you're there, maybe
on the orders of the freaking CEO of eBay, that's now front page news, that's
now an article in the New York Times. That's the kind of thing you can't possibly be unaware
of. So, I get it, the world is full of weirdos and people I don't understand but it's one
thing to not understand say, Jeffrey Dahmer who clearly was extremely ill and had totally lost touch with reality.
And here, where you had a bunch of people
sending messages back and forth
and all of them nodding along with like,
yes, crush her, burn her to the ground,
leave nothing but ashes behind.
I don't get it, I'll never get it,
I'm glad that I don't get it.
Well, that is our final word on the story until next time.
If your boss tells you hey, I need you to fly to Boston in order to place a GPS tracker on this bloggers car.
Don't do that. You might go to prison for a year. Anyway, this has been Life Advice with Robert Evans,
a co-production of Behind the Bastards.
Jason, thank you for coming on the show by Jason's book slash books.
We're done.
Behind the Bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media.
For more from Cool Zone Media, visit our website, coolzonedmedia.com, or check us out on the
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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