Levandowski says Uber must pay his $179 million judgment to Google

Self-driving engineer says Uber promised to defend him against Google’s lawyers. …

A casually dressed man speaks into a microphone from a behind a Manhasset (or Manhasset-style) music stand.

Enlarge / Anthony Levandowski, then-VP of engineering at Uber, in 2016. Levandowski co-founded self-driving truck startup Otto and then led Uber’s self-driving technology efforts before being fired in 2017.

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Alphabet’s huge legal battle with Uber over self-driving technology ended two years ago. But the engineer at the center of that fight, Anthony Levandowski, is still facing legal and financial headaches. On Monday, he told a federal bankruptcy court in California that Uber was contractually obligated to cover a $179 million legal judgment that Levandowski owes to Google. Levandowski asked the court to order Uber to enter arbitration on the matter.

Levandowski claims that Uber was fully aware of the circumstances of Levandowski’s 2016 departure from Google when Uber acquired Levandowski’s self-driving startup, Otto, later the same year. Prior to the acquisition, Uber hired a firm to look into the background of Otto and its founders. Levandwoski says he cooperated fully, giving investigators access to his email accounts and personal files.

According to Levandowski, the investigators found—and told Uber—that Levandowski had files belonging to Google on his devices and had tried to recruit a number of Google employees for his new company while he still worked for Google. Levandowski claims that he repeatedly warned Uber management, including CEO Travis Kalanick, that Google was likely to sue if Uber bought Otto. But according to Levandowski, Kalanick wasn’t concerned. “Uber eats injunctions for breakfast,” he allegedly told Levandowski.

Levandowski says Uber’s acquisition terms for Otto included a sweeping indemnification commitment

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