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Former Google Self-Driving Engineer Pleads Guilty to Trade Secrets Theft

Anthony Levandowski admitted he downloaded thousands of proprietary files from an internal Google server in 2015

AP Photo/Michael Liedtke This Sept. 24, 2019, file photo shows former Google engineer Anthony Levandowski, right, proclaiming his innocence of charges that he stole self-driving car technology before leaving Google in early 2016 to lead Uber’s efforts to build its own fleet of robotic vehicles in front of his attorney, Miles Ehrlich, outside of a federal courthouse in San Francisco.

A former engineer in Google's self-driving division who became the focus of a criminal investigation that rocked Silicon Valley has pleaded guilty to a count of trade secrets theft, NBC News reports.

Anthony Levandowski admitted he downloaded thousands of proprietary files from an internal Google server in 2015 and transferred them to his personal laptop, according to filings submitted Thursday in federal court in San Francisco.

Among the numerous files Levandowski downloaded was one called "Chauffeur TL weekly updates – Q4 2015," an internal document that included numerous details about Google's self-driving program, the Justice Department said in the court documents.

"I downloaded this file with the intent to use it for the benefit of someone other than Google," Levandowski wrote in the filing. "The Chauffeur Weekly Update contained a variety of details regarding the status of Google's self-driving car program."

Read the full story on NBCNews.com

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