Josh Harry Isler, age 55, from St. Ansgar, Iowa, was
sentenced today in United States District Court in Cedar Rapids to serve 42
months’ imprisonment as a result of his July 11, 2018, pleas of guilty to one
count of trade secret theft and one count of making a false statement to the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
As part of his guilty plea, Isler admitted that, during
August 2013, while employed with DuPont, and after having accepted an offer of
employment with a smaller competitor, he stole and misappropriated, without
authorization, trade secrets of DuPont.
According to admissions contained in a plea agreement and evidence
presented at a prior hearing in the case, Isler was recruited by a competitor
of DuPont in the ethanol fuel business to take a job with the competitor. The competitor offered Isler a new car and a
significantly higher salary than Isler had been paid during his short tenure at
DuPont, despite the fact that Isler had been underperforming and struggling to
understand basic concepts while employed by DuPont.
On the same day Isler accepted a position with the
competitor, the competitor’s Chief Operating Officer (COO) informed Isler that
Isler would be servicing two particular ethanol plant customers, who had also
been customers of DuPont, and asked Isler if he had seen “any baseline data”
for those plants. Isler responded by
stating, “let me see what I can before I can’t.” In a later message that day, the COO told
Isler, “I think you made the right choice.”
Isler submitted his resignation letter to DuPont the
following day. However, Isler did not
leave DuPont until two weeks later.
During the intervening two weeks, Isler downloaded and sent to the
competitor numerous electronic files that contained proprietary and trade
secret information of DuPont. This
included test, yield, and pricing information for products and customers of
DuPont.
A few days before leaving DuPont, Isler notified the
competitor’s COO that he would be turning in his company phone to DuPont. The COO instructed Isler to “erase all texts
with me before giving the phone back.”
During an exit interview with DuPont, Isler acknowledged
that he understood a confidentiality agreement he signed before he started work
with DuPont required that Isler keep DuPont’s intellectual property private
even after he left the company.
A few months after Isler left DuPont, the FBI executed a
federal search warrant at his residence and seized computers and other
electronic storage devices that contained proprietary and trade secret
information of DuPont. At that time,
Isler falsely denied to the FBI that he had downloaded, to his DuPont or
personal electronic storage devices, files containing proprietary information
of DuPont.
At the sentencing hearing today, United States District
Court Judge Linda R. Reade emphasized that, although Isler had signed a
confidentiality agreement and had been trained and counseled by DuPont
concerning his obligation to protect trade secrets, he nonetheless committed
several criminal violations of these obligations within about six months of
being hired by DuPont. The court also
expressed concern about the ethics of the competitor in receiving the stolen
information.
Isler was sentenced to serve 42 months’ imprisonment and
ordered to pay a $200 special assessment and a $5000 fine. The court also ordered Isler to serve a
3-year term of supervised release following completion of the term of
imprisonment.
“The theft of intellectual property is not only unfair, it
is a serious crime with serious consequences,” said United States Attorney
Peter E. Deegan, Jr. “Those who steal
trade secrets seek to gain an unfair advantage over their victims and, in the
process, their greedy acts damage our economy and stifle technological
development. My office will continue to
prosecute those who steal secrets from companies in the Northern District of
Iowa.”
FBI Special Agent in Charge of the Omaha Division Randall
Thysse said, "The theft of trade secrets and other intellectual property
harms individual companies and our economy, and the FBI will continue to
aggressively investigate these activities."
Isler was allowed the privilege of self-surrender to the
United States Bureau of Prisons.
The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney
Richard L. Murphy and was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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