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Apr 12, 2001
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Former Apple employee Dhirendra Prasad this week pled guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud and conspiracy to defraud the United States after stealing more than $17 million from Apple through mail and wire fraud schemes.

Apple-Logo-Cash-Feature-Yellow.jpg

According to the Northern California District Attorney's office, Prasad worked for a ten-year period between 2008 and 2018. He was in the Global Service Supply Chain department, buying parts and services for Apple from vendors.

Starting in 2011, Prasad began accepting kickbacks, inflating invoices, and stealing parts, which resulted in Apple paying for items and services that it did not receive. Prasad worked with two Apple vendors, Robert Gary Hansen and Don M. Baker, to steal money.

In 2013, for example, Prasad had motherboards shipped from Apple's inventory to Baker's company, CTrends. Baker had the components from the motherboards harvested, with Prasad arranging purchase orders for the harvested components so that Apple paid for parts it already owned. The two split the funds from the arrangement.

In 2016, Prasad had components shipped from Apple to Hansen's business, Quality Electronics Distributors, Inc. Hansen intercepted the components, put then in new packaging, shipped them back to Apple's warehouse, and charged Apple for it through Prasad.

Prasad also funneled illicit payments from Hansen to his creditors, and he also created a shell company to send sham invoices to CTrends to hide illicit payments and to allow Baker to claim hundreds of thousands of dollars of unjustified tax deductions.

Prasad could spend up to 25 years in prison after he is sentenced, with the hearing set to take place in March 2023. He also must forfeit $5 million in assets that he gained from the schemes.

Article Link: Former Apple Employee Pleads Guilty to Stealing More Than $17 Million
 
I always wondered how people have the cojones to do this for such an extended period of time... I feel like my heart would be coming out of my chest all the time, and I wouldn't be able to sleep at night with the stress killing me, and the fear that the police would knock down my door at any minute, if I had a racket like this going on
 
I am surprised Apple didn't know about this sooner.
I've known several people who owned or were high up in businesses and all have said it comes down to greed. They said if they employee had kept their theft down to a lower amount, it would have never been caught. It was always someone who started (relatively) small, didn't get caught, and increased their theft. At some point, the amount being stolen was enough to trigger some oversight that caught the issue. In one case, a manager of a store was crediting his personal credit card when processing credit card transactions at night. One time the amount he tried trigged a fraud warning from the credit card company, who called the business and that's how they learned a manager was stealing.

Unethical Pro Life Hack - keep you thefts small!
 
im always amazed people can do this and I can barely figure out which plug in the tv fits the HDMI cable
My issue is first I have to find the ARC one, and it's always dark behind the TV, so I have to either balance the phone with the flashlight properly or hold it in one hand while I try to put the cable in at the right orientation
 
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