Corporate-Espionage, E-Mail Break-in Case Zaps Electronics Industry

The corporate-espionage case of David Goldenberg, former executive with AMX Corp., is rocking the world of high-end office and consumer electronics systems where Goldenberg, who broke into Sapphire marketing’s e-mail systems to steal information about competitor Creston Electronics, all knew each other well.

By Ellen Messmer
Thu, May 14, 2009

Network World — A corporate-espionage case in which an executive from electronics manufacturer, AMX Corp, broke into the e-mail system of the marketing firm working for a competitor Crestron Electronics to steal sensitive business information has rocked that industry.

David Goldenberg, a resident of Long Island and former vice president in the New York-area office of Richardson, Texas.-based AMX Corp., pled guilty this week in a New Jersey courtroom to felony wiretapping in connection with illegally accessing the internal e-mail at Crestron’s sales and marketing firm, Sapphire Marketing, based in Woodcliff Hills, N.J.

As part of the plea deal with the Bergen Court Prosecutor’s Office, which has spared Goldenberg from a criminal trial, the prosecutor there, Brian Lynch, is recommending probation.

That’s in part because Goldenberg has been largely cooperative after being approached by the Paramus Police Department in February 2008 after Sapphire filed a complaint about suspicions that business e-mail concerning AMX was being intercepted and Goldenberg had something to do with it.

“It’s a third-degree wiretapping charge,” says prosecutor Lynch, noting Goldenberg has no prior convictions so he’s eligible for probation, which he called “fair and just” in the case. Lynch noted his office, where most cases focus on nabbing online predators, gets few corporate espionage cases.

However, probation may not necessarily be the outcome as Goldenberg’s sentence comes down from a judge as scheduled on June 26th.

Goldenberg and his attorney declined to comment, but at Creston Electronics, Jeff Singer, communications director, called what Goldenberg did, to which he admitted in his guilty plea, “outrageous.”

From what is known, says Singer, it appears that Goldenberg managed to get the passwords and log-ins for Web-based e-mail access for four employees at Sapphire, reading Sapphire e-mail on a daily basis for about seven months. Eventually Goldenberg was simply forwarding it to his own e-mail account.

But the day came when an employee at Sapphire, whose business function puts it in close contact with Crestron corporate and consumer customers for high-end access control systems for video, lighting and climate control, did notice her e-mail was being forwarded to an outside account.

Marla Suttenberg, owner of Sapphire Marketing, could not be reached for direct comment, but in a written statement this week she indicated she immediately notified local law authorities and let them gather evidence, and improved the e-mail security.

The revelation that Goldenberg was the source of the e-mail break-in was particularly devastating because Suttenberg knew Goldenberg and his family personally. Prior to working at AMX, Goldenberg had been a client of Sapphire’s buying Crestron products. Crestron says Goldenberg applied for a job at Crestron in 2007 but wasn’t hired but was hired by AMX.Goldenberg also knew Crestron Electronics executive vice president Randy Klein, who states “the full damage caused by our chief competitor illegally obtaining this information is immeasurable and has seriously impacted our past, present and future business.”

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