A former Zulily software engineer allegedly stole more than $300,000 from the company through multiple schemes, including one inspired by the 1999 movie “Office Space,” according to new charging documents filed by prosecutors.
No, the alleged fraud didn’t involve a red stapler, or smashing printers in a field. Instead, prosecutors say, Ermenildo “Ernie” Valdez Castro of Tacoma, Wash., altered the Seattle-based e-commerce company’s code to divert shipping fees from Zulily customer purchases to a Stripe account that he controlled.
Evidence against Valdez includes notes in which he referred to the plan as the “OfficeSpace project,” in an apparent reference to a storyline in the cult classic film, in which an IT worker embezzles fractions of cents from individual transactions.
In a probable-cause certification, Seattle Police Detective Nicholas Kartes said Castro, after waiving his Miranda rights, confirmed in an interview “that he named his scheme to steal money from Zulily after the movie.”
Castro, who joined Zulily in 2018, also allegedly stole money using code that double-charged some Zulily customers for shipping.
Separately, Castro also manipulated the prices of items sold by Zulily and bought them for pennies-on-the-dollar, according to the charges.
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>A former Zulily software engineer allegedly stole more than $300,000 from the company through multiple schemes, including one inspired by the 1999 movie “Office Space,” according to new charging documents filed by prosecutors.
>No, the alleged fraud didn’t involve a red stapler, or smashing printers in a field. Instead, prosecutors say, Ermenildo “Ernie” Valdez Castro of Tacoma, Wash., altered the Seattle-based e-commerce company’s code to divert shipping fees from Zulily customer purchases to a Stripe account that he controlled.
>Evidence against Valdez includes notes in which he referred to the plan as the “OfficeSpace project,” in an apparent reference to a storyline in the cult classic film, in which an IT worker embezzles fractions of cents from individual transactions.
>In a probable-cause certification, Seattle Police Detective Nicholas Kartes said Castro, after waiving his Miranda rights, confirmed in an interview “that he named his scheme to steal money from Zulily after the movie.”
>Castro, who joined Zulily in 2018, also allegedly stole money using code that double-charged some Zulily customers for shipping.
>Separately, Castro also manipulated the prices of items sold by Zulily and bought them for pennies-on-the-dollar, according to the charges.
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[Source](https://www.geekwire.com/2022/office-space-movie-plot-gave-zulily-engineer-a-blueprint-for-financial-fraud-prosecutors-allege/)
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