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The Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into human resources and payroll startup Deel over allegations that it hired a corporate spy to leak information about its largest competitor, Ripling, reportedly. Wall Street Journal.
In an emailed statement to TechCrunch, Deel said it was “not aware of any investigation. We will always cooperate with the relevant authorities and provide any necessary information in response to valid inquiries.”
Bayan Dale then makes his own allegations against Riebling. She points to her lawsuit alleging that her competitor was engaged in a “smear campaign,” claiming to have a market advantage over the competitor, and adds: “The truth will prevail in court.” Ripple declined to comment.
This is arguably the biggest drama between two HR startups ever.
To summarize, Rippling filed a lawsuit against Dell in JuneClaiming that her competitor had planted a corporate spy. A Rippling employee was caught in a sting operation and admitted being a paid spy for Deel in an Irish court via A sworn written statement reads like a Hollywood movie. The employee testified that he took Rippling’s sales data, product roadmaps, customer account information, names of star employees, whatever was asked of him, and delivered it to Deel executives.
Riebling’s lawsuit, which is ongoing, accuses her rival of violating the federal racketeering statute (known as the RICO statute and commonly used against organized crime) among other laws it cited. But despite the use of phrases like “criminal syndicate,” this was a civil lawsuit, not a criminal trial.
Deel countered Rippling, and also alleged espionage by impersonating an agent, among other claims.
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The man who admitted to spying agreed to testify in Riebling’s case, and Riebling agreed to pay him his legal and travel expenses, according to the man’s cooperation agreement released as a court document and seen by TechCrunch. Dale now calls the Rippling man a “paid witness.”
But the man also returned to court claiming that his family lived there Horror because he believed men from the Dáil were following him. Dale’s lawyer initially denied this, however It is later discovered that Dale hired the surveillance.
Rippling recorded its latest win, at the end of November, When I got the bank records. Records indicated that Deel transferred the funds to an account held by the wife of Deel’s operations manager, and 56 seconds later that account transferred the same amount to an account held by the confessed spy.
Meanwhile, another court document shows that Dell founder and CEO Alexandre Bouaziz, called the “mastermind” of the espionage plot in Riebling’s lawsuit, has hired high-profile attorney William Frentzen to represent him. Frentzen is a partner in Morrison Foerster’s White Collar Defense Group and was previously Chief of the Corporate and Securities Fraud Unit in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California.
Rippling’s attorney is none other than Alex Spiro of the white-shoe law firm Quinn Emanuel. Spiro is a former prosecutor for the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and is known for his outsized personality and long list of celebrity clients, from Elon Musk to Jay-Z.
So it all sounds like the plot from a John Grisham novel, with a little “suits” thrown in on top.
None of this stopped investors from backing Deel or Rippling. In October, Dell announced its success With a value of $17.3 billion After raising $300 million led by Ribbit Capital and Andreessen Horowitz. Ripple hit a $16.8 billion valuation in May After raising $450 million from investors such as Elad Gil, Goldman Sachs Alternatives, and Y Combinator.