• @[email protected]
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    2622 months ago

    Up to 10 years is crazy. Sure, what he did was wrong, planned and malicious, and they claim it cost them tens of thousands of dollars. But 10 years? This is crazy for something that at worst would be a yearly salary of a single employee.

    Fucking capitalism.

    • @[email protected]
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      312 months ago

      allegedly costing hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses.

      Also it’s sabotage, which might attract heavier penalties than mere theft?

      • @[email protected]
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        162 months ago

        Actually for federal sentencing, property destruction is punished under the same table as theft. It’s mostly measured from the amount of loss to the victims, whether the person actually profited from it or not.

    • @[email protected]
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      602 months ago

      “Up to 10 years” is the maximum possible for that type of crime. Actual sentencing guidelines for a $500k loss for a first time offender will probably come out to about 2, maybe 3 years.

      In order for the recommended sentence to hit 10 years, we’d have to be talking about damage of over $550 million, or something like a long criminal history.

      Substantial disruption of critical infrastructure would get someone to around 5 years, as a reference.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      Now to make it worse, ask this, “If the corporation did 10 times this amount of damage, but to the general citizens of the country, how many people would go to jail?”

      That’s right 0 people would go to jail! And they would only be fined for no more than 10% of the profit they made while doing it. Maybe someone like a jr director of operations gets tossed in jail, but he wasnt really apart of the club.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 months ago

        Nah they would have added more fees to subsidize the protections they weren’t going to put in place. Then reach out to the government for subsidies to put these protections in place. Then give bonuses, stock buy backs and when it happened again, they’d raise the fees installed previously and consider making the upgrades if the fine threatened is high enough, if not they’ll pay the fine and buy back more stock and run an ad campaign to make the company look better.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 months ago

      “allegedly costing hundreds of thousands of dollars in losses.” It seems he was already messing with the systems while he was still working there. This is not a case of malicious compliance or they fired the only guy who knew how something worked. He was actively sabotaging the company’s network.

      “he apparently became disgruntled by a corporate “realignment” in 2018 that “reduced his responsibilities,”” So it’s not even like the company was being evil as they fired him while he was on PTO to take care of his daughter with leukaemia (or something). He would’ve been better off finding a new job if he was unhappy. Instead he made things far worse.

      But 10 years is way too high. Especially for a victimless crime with alleged “values” of loss. But otherwise he gets no sympathy from me.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      he should have tried to overthrow the government, or stole classified documents. that’s a drastically lower sentence

    • fmstrat
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      2 months ago

      Don’t F with the power grid.

      owned by the Ohio- and Dublin-based power management company Eaton Corp.

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eaton_Corporation

      Sentences are always harsh for anything to do with those who provide for public utilities.

      @[email protected] has a comment about sabotage, which was likely a factor combined with this to drive max recommended sentencing.