PROVIDENCE, R.I.—Wearing leg irons and guarded by federal agents,
David Whitaker posed as an agent for online drug dealers in dozens of
recorded phone calls and email exchanges with Google sales executives,
spending $200,000 in government money for ads selling narcotics,
steroids and other controlled substances.
Over four months in 2009, Mr. Whitaker, a
federal prisoner and convicted con artist, was the lead actor in a
government sting targeting Google Inc. that yielded one of the largest
business forfeitures in U.S. history.
"There was a part of me that felt bad," Mr. Whitaker wrote in his
account of the undercover operation viewed by The Wall Street Journal.
"I had grown to like these people." But, he said, "I took ease in
knowing they…knew it was wrong."
The government built its criminal case against Google using money,
aliases and fake companies—tactics often used against drug cartels and
other crime syndicates, according to interviews and court documents.
Google agreed to pay a $500 million forfeiture last summer in a
settlement to avoid prosecution for aiding illegal online pharmaceutical
sales.
Google acknowledged in the settlement that it had improperly and
knowingly assisted online pharmacy advertisers allegedly based in Canada
to run advertisements for illicit pharmacy sales targeting U.S.
customers.
"We banned the advertising of
prescription drugs in the U.S. by Canadian pharmacies some time ago,"
the company said in its sole comment on the matter. "However, it's
obvious with hindsight that we shouldn't have allowed these ads on
Google in the first place."
The half-billion dollar forfeiture,
although historically large, was small change for Google, which holds
$45 billion in cash. But the company's acceptance of responsibility
opened the door to potential liability for taking ads from other people
involved in unlawful acts online, such as distributing pirate movies or
perpetrating online fraud.
Google has long argued it wasn't
responsible for the actions of its more than one million advertisers.
But the forfeiture paid by Google represented not just the money it made
from the ads, but also the revenue collected by illegal pharmacies
through Google-related sales.
In an important shift, the settlement
"signals that, where evidence can be developed that a search engine
knowingly and actively assisted advertisers to promote improper conduct,
the search engine can be held accountable as an accomplice," according
to Peter Neronha, the lead prosecutor.
Unknown is whether the company will
toss aside advertisers as a result. "If Google were to adopt a much more
restrictive definition of problematic advertisements, everyone would
immediately notice a drop in their revenue," said Eric Goldman, director
of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University.
The government's case also contained potentially embarrassing allegations that top Google executives, including co-founder Larry Page, were told about legal problems with the drug ads.
Mr. Page, now Google's chief
executive, knew about the illicit conduct, said Mr. Neronha, the U.S.
attorney for Rhode Island who led the multiagency federal task force
that conducted the sting. "We simply know from the documents we reviewed
and witnesses we interviewed that Larry Page knew what was going on,"
he said in an interview after the August settlement.
Mr. Neronha declined to detail the
evidence, which was presented in secret to a federal grand jury. Other
people familiar with the case said internal emails showed Sheryl Sandberg, a former top Google executive who left in 2008 for Facebook Inc., had raised concerns about the ads.
Prosecutors could have used that
evidence to argue Google deliberately turned a blind eye to lawbreaking
to protect a profit stream estimated by the government in the hundreds
of millions of dollars.
Ms. Sandberg declined to comment through a spokesman. Mr. Page also declined to comment.
"We ban not just ads but also
advertisers who abuse our platform, and we work closely with law
enforcement and other government authorities to take action against bad
actors," said Kent Walker, Google's general counsel.
Mr. Whitaker's story, told here for
the first time, presents a different picture. Shuffling into federal
court in handcuffs and beige overalls last month, the 37-year-old
prisoner looked like he could pass for an employee of a Silicon Valley
start-up.
The
Tennessee native suffers from bipolar disorder, according to court
submissions by his lawyers, and has a history of manic spending and
fraud sprees. When he was 16 years old, Mr. Whitaker took his mother's
credit card, rented a private jet and flew his girlfriend for a shopping
spree in Knoxville, the documents said.
Mr. Whitaker's path to undercover
operative began in 2005, when he took millions of dollars in orders for
Apple iPods and other electronics at below market prices and skipped
town without filling the orders, according to his account and court
documents. He hopscotched around the U.S. in a private jet, evading
arrest and protected by a private security detail. He briefly rented a
Miami mansion for $200,000 a month.
He fled to Mexico in 2006 and started
an Internet pharmacy, selling steroids and human growth hormone to U.S.
consumers through Google ads, he said. The two substances—sold in the
U.S. by prescription only—are sought by body builders to add muscle and
by older consumers seeking to slow the signs of aging; they aren't
approved in the U.S. for such uses. Google's policy prohibited
advertising their sale online.
"It was very obvious to Google that my
website was not a licensed pharmacy," Mr. Whitaker wrote to the
Journal. "Understanding this, Google provided me with a very generous
credit line and allowed me to set my target advertising directly to
American consumers."
Mr. Whitaker was arrested in Mexico in
March 2008 for entering that country illegally and returned to the U.S.
to face charges of wire fraud, conspiracy and commercial bribery in the
iPod case. Mr. Whitaker told U.S. authorities about the alleged role
Google played in helping his Mexico-based pharmacy.
Federal prosecutors, seeking to test
the allegation, set up a task force in early 2009 with Mr. Whitaker's
help. On weekdays, he was escorted from the Wyatt Detention Facility in
Central Falls, R.I., to a former school department building in North
Providence, R.I. There, under the watch of federal agents, he set a
snare for Google.
Posing as the fictitious Jason
Corriente, an agent for advertisers with lots of money to spend, Mr.
Whitaker bypassed Google's automated advertising system to reach
flesh-and-blood ad executives. Federal agents created
www.SportsDrugs.net, designed to look "as if a Mexican drug lord had
built a website to sell HGH and steroids," Mr. Whitaker said in his
account of the sting.
Google first rejected it, along with
an anti-aging website called www.NotGrowingOldEasy.com. But the
company's ad executives worked with Mr. Whitaker to find a way around
Google rules, according to prosecutors and Mr. Whitaker's account.
The undercover team removed a link to
buy the drugs directly—instead requiring customers to submit an online
request form—and Google approved it. "The site generated a flood of
email traffic from customers wanting to buy HGH and steroids," Mr.
Whitaker said.
To pay Google's fees for the growing
online traffic, undercover agents made payments every two or three days
with a government-backed credit card.
Federal agents grew more brazen. They
created a site selling weight-loss medications without a prescription,
according to Mr. Whitaker and people familiar with the matter. They also
added another site selling the abortion pill RU-486, which in the U.S.
can only be taken in a doctor's office.
Google's ad team in Mexico approved
the site, so U.S. consumers searching for "RU 486" would see an ad for
the site. Google ad executives allowed the agents to add the phrase "no
prescription needed."
Days later, federal agents added links
to buy the drugs directly. Such sales broke U.S. laws prohibiting the
sale of drugs from outside the country and without a prescription.
"There were photos of the drugs, descriptions, labels that clearly
printed out that we were shipping without a prescription and it was from
Mexico," Mr. Whitaker said.
By the end of the operation in
mid-2009, agents were buying Google ads for sites purportedly selling
such prescription-only narcotics as oxycodone and hydrocodone. Agents
also got Google's sales office in China to approve a site selling Prozac
and Valium to U.S. customers without a prescription.
"Google's employees were instrumental
in bypassing policy regarding pharmacy verification," Mr. Whitaker told
the Journal. "The websites were blatantly illegal."
At the agents' direction, Mr. Whitaker
said he signaled his illegal intent to Google ad executives, including
Google's top manager in Mexico. As a tape recorder ran, he walked Google
executives through the illegal parts of the websites. He said he told
ad executives that U.S. Customs had seized shipments, for example, and
that one client wanted to be "the biggest steroid dealer in the United
States."
Agents at first ignored the flood of
orders. But as the ersatz sites morphed into full-fledged Internet
pharmacies, they worried that clients, some sick, would be expecting
medication.
So customers were told they had to
become members by filling out an online form and to receive a
"membership kit." The kits never arrived, but it stopped users from
placing orders, Mr. Whitaker said.
In the summer of 2009, U.S. agents
visited Google's headquarters in Mountain View, Calif., to tell
corporate executives about the evidence they had collected. Prosecutors
served grand jury subpoenas and eventually collected four million pages
of internal emails and documents, as well as witness testimony.
The federal task force, which also
included the Food and Drug Administration's Office of Criminal
Investigation, was preparing criminal charges against the company and
its executives for aiding and abetting criminal activity online,
prosecutors said.
Google hired attorney Jamie Gorelick,
the former deputy U.S. Attorney General under President Bill Clinton.
Two years later, the company reached a settlement with the government, a
decision that stopped the likely introduction of emails to top Google
executives had the case gone to trial.
"Suffice to say this was not two or
three rogue employees at the customer service level doing this on their
own," said Mr. Neronha, the U.S. attorney. "This was corporate decision
to engage in this conduct."
Six private shareholder lawsuits have
so far been filed against Google's executives and board members,
alleging they damaged the company by not taking earlier action against
the illegal pharmacy ads.
Google has other potential legal
exposure. Record companies and movie studios say Google willfully
profits from illegal Internet piracy—an issue raised last week, when
Congress dropped antipiracy legislation after opposition from Internet
companies, including Google.
A 2011 study commissioned by NBC
Universal estimated that nearly a quarter of all Internet traffic
relates to pirated movies, TV shows and games. "There's big business in
being agnostic about what sites you place your ads on," said Jay Roth,
national executive director of Directors Guild of America, which backed
antipiracy legislation.
Online scams pose another potential
legal threat. Searches relating to mortgage refinancing have been among
the most popular on Google, Eric Schmidt
said in 2009 when he was chief executive. An investigation by Consumer
Watchdog, a consumer advocacy group, found that a large number of
companies selling "mortgage modification" on Google bore the hallmarks
of fraud.
The special inspector general's office
for the Troubled Asset Relief Program in November said it had shut down
85 alleged online loan modification schemes that defrauded homeowners
through Google ads.
"Google has a natural long-term
financial incentive to make sure that the advertisements we serve are
trustworthy so that users continue to use our services, and we aren't
afraid to take aggressive action to achieve that goal," the company
said.
To end the sting, federal agents
killed off Mr. Whitaker's fictional character. They sent the Google
employees a final email, allegedly from Jason Corriente's brother,
saying the online entrepreneur died in a car crash.
Mr. Whitaker, who pleaded guilty and
faced a maximum 65-year prison term, was sentenced in December to six
years, following what federal prosecutors called "rather extraordinary"
cooperation. He is due for release in two years.
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