Stanford Employee Pleads Guilty in Stolen MacBook Scheme

<p><strong>SACRAMENTO<&sol;strong> — Patricia Castaneda&comma; 38&comma; of Redwood City and a former employee of Stanford University&comma; was sentenced to 33 months in prison and her brother&comma; Eric Castaneda&comma; 37&comma; also of Redwood City&comma; was sentenced to 18 months in prison by U&period;S&period; District Judge Kimberly J&period; Mueller for their roles in a scheme that involved the theft and interstate sale of Apple MacBooks&comma; U&period;S&period; Attorney Phillip A&period; Talbert announced&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In addition&comma; Judge Mueller ordered Patricia Castaneda to pay &dollar;4&comma;077&comma;832 in restitution and ordered Eric Castaneda to pay &dollar;2&comma;283&comma;155 in restitution&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>According to court documents&comma; Patricia Castaneda worked in the School of Humanities and Sciences at Stanford University&period; In her position&comma; Patricia Castaneda’s duties included ordering MacBooks for university faculty and staff&period; In 2009 or 2010&comma; Patricia Castaneda began stealing MacBooks she ordered and selling them for cash&period; Initially&comma; Patricia Castaneda sold the stolen MacBooks to an individual she met on Craigslist&period; In approximately February 2016&comma; Patricia Castaneda began giving the stolen MacBooks to Eric Castaneda to sell to an individual named Philip James who&comma; in turn&comma; resold and shipped the MacBooks from Folsom to buyers outside California&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In total&comma; the cost to the university of MacBooks Patricia Castaneda stole was over &dollar;4 million&period; That amount includes the cost to the university of approximately 800 stolen MacBooks Eric Castaneda sold to James&comma; which was approximately &dollar;2&period;3 million&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>This case was a product of an investigation by the IRS-Criminal Investigation and the Federal Bureau of Investigation&period; Assistant U&period;S&period; Attorney Matthew Thuesen prosecuted the case&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In a separate case&comma; on April 11&comma; 2022&comma; James pleaded guilty for his role in the scheme&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

Editor

ALM Ventures Debuts $100 Million Fund

MOUNTAIN VIEW -- ALM Ventures has announced the launch of ALM Ventures Fund I, a…

16 hours

Brainworks Ventures Launches $50 Million AI-Native Fund

SAN FRANCISCO -- Brainworks Ventures, an AI-native venture capital fund led by DARPA alumnus Dr.…

16 hours

OpenAI Hires New Chief Revenue Officer

OpenAI is hiring Slack CEO Denise Dresser as the company's Chief Revenue Officer, overseeing global…

16 hours

Teen Charged With Shooting at Westfield Valley Fair Mall

The Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office has charged a San Jose 17-year-old with attempted…

16 hours

Lemurian Labs Secures $28 Million Series A

SANTA CLARA — Lemurian Labs has secured $28 million in an oversubscribed Series A round,…

4 days

Ripple Foods Chomps Down on $17 Million in New Funding

EMERYVILLE -- Ripple Foods, a producer of high-protein, allergen-free plant-based milks, has landed $17 million in…

4 days