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DESCRIPTION:Silicon Toxic Dumpsites, Workers Health & Safety & The RICO Case Against 
 Apple\nJuly 23 @ 5:30 pm pst/7:30 pm cst/8:30 pm est \n\nAshley M. Gjøvik 
 was a Apple senior engineering program managers who  discovered a toxic 
 dump site under  her office and also next to her apartment building. She 
 filed EPA, OSHA  complaints and was terrorized and illegally fired by  
 Apple.\n\nApple  in Silicon valley had put an  office on a toxic dump site 
 and workers were getting sick from the fumes. When Apple’s senior 
 engineering program manager Gjøvik reported it to Apple, they refused to 
 take action to defend the workers. She went to EPA, OSHA and other local, 
 state and federal agencies  and had also been harassed and retaliated 
 against  on other issues including illegally spying at her home  with 
 software they were testing.\n\nShe eventually filed a RICO complaint 
 against Apple.\n\nShe was getting sick and discovered that Apple was also 
 releasing fumes from a silicon manufacturing facility close to her 
 apartment and the homes of others.\n\nShe also discovered that Apple had 
 hired former Obama director of the EPA Lisa Jackson  to run the 
 Environmental and Government relations for Apple.\n\nShe will report on the 
 systemic violations of health and safety, labor and human rights by Apple 
 and what it means to working people and organizing at Apple.\n\nAdditional 
 Media:\n\nThe Union Busting War On Apple Workers & NLRB Ruling For Fired 
 Apple Worker Ashley M. Gjøvik\nhttps://youtu.be/ycxIbfO-pG0\nUS Labor 
 Secretary Marty Walsh: Stop US DOL OSHA Whistleblower Corruption 
 Now\nhttps://www.change.org/p/marty-walsh-stop-us-dol-osha-whistleblower-corruption-now\nhttp://justiceatapple.com/\nApple 
 Toxic Is It Above The Law? With Whistleblower Ashley M. 
 Gjøvik\nhttps://youtu.be/cvxNLu7BhaI\nPart II: My personal hellscape of 
 conflicts of interest, obstruction, & arbitrary denials of due process 
 continues…\nhttps://ashleygjovik.substack.com/p/field-notes-on-regulatory-capture-c08\nApple 
 Wanted Her Fired. It Settled on an Absurd 
 Excuse\nhttps://gizmodo.com/apple-wanted-her-fired-it-settled-on-an-absurd-excuse-1847868789\nApple 
 Employee Blows Whistle on Illegal Spying and Toxic Working 
 Conditions\nhttps://truthout.org/articles/apple-employee-blows-whistle-on-illegal-spying-and-toxic-working-conditions/\nSilicon 
 Valley Chemical Contamination & 
 Exposure\nhttp://www.whatsintheair.org/silicon-valley.html\nI thought I was 
 dying: My apartment was built on toxic 
 waste\nhttps://sfbayview.com/2021/03/i-thought-i-was-dying-my-apartment-was-built-on-toxic-waste/\nWW 
  4-22-22 The Corporate Capture Of OSHA & The US Government Corruption 
 Cover-up\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio/ww-4-22-22-the-corporate-capture-of-osha-the-us-government-corruption-cover-up\nOn 
 Workers Memorial Day 2021  Former  OSHA WPP Lawyer & Investigator Darrell 
 Whitman Speaks Out!\nhttps://youtu.be/9ZL9cSolNFw\nOSHA Corruption, 
 Cover-up & US Inspector Generals With OHSA Whistleblower & Lawyer Darrell 
 Whitman\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDPQpqmUq2k\nOSHA Corruption, 
 Cover-up & US Inspector Generals With OHSA Whistleblower & Lawyer Darrell 
 Whitman\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDPQpqmUq2k\nOSHA, Corruption & 
 The Capture of US Inspector Generals With Whistleblower Darrell 
 Whitman\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUVIu-Op8Wg&t=33s\nThe Office Of 
 Special Counsel OSC,  Corruption, Kerner &  OSHA WPP Whistleblower Lawyer 
 Whitman\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GCxYm65qwaI\nhttps://techcrunch.com/2023/01/30/labor-officials-found-that-apple-execs-infringed-on-workers-rights/\nhttps://www.entrepreneur.com/business-news/apple-violated-labor-laws-nlrb-says/444043\nhttps://www.theregister.com/2023/02/01/nlrb_apple_labor_laws\nhttps://www.reuters.com/technology/apple-workplace-rules-violate-us-labor-law-agency-finds-2023-01-31/\nhttps://www.fudzilla.com/news/56240-watchdog-barks-at-apple-s-staff-management-policy\nWorkWeek\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio\nwww.laborfest.net\n\nApple 
 Corporate Crime Update\nSummary of recent white collar crime charges and 
 complaints against Apple Computer \n\nASHLEY M. GJØVIK\nSEP 8, 
 2023\nAshley Files a RICO Lawsuit Against Apple\n\nAs many of you know, 
 I’ve been in a legal battle with my ex-employer for over two years now. I 
 won my unemployment insurance appeal, the initial decision of merit on my 
 US Department of Labor charges of whistleblower retaliation under SOX, 
 CERCLA, and the OSH Act; my NLRB charge alleging Apple’s NDAs and 
 employment policies violate federal law; my charge that an email from CEO 
 Tim Cook violated federal law; and more. I’ve also been working with a 
 number of government agencies who are investigating my complaints. In fact, 
 my environmental complaints have led to two federal safety inspections of 
 two Apple office buildings in Silicon Valley. \n\nHowever, I still do not 
 have final decisions on my retaliation charges against Apple and my 
 two-year statute of limitations for many of my potential civil claims 
 expires tomorrow. So, I filed a civil lawsuit yesterday. I decided that if 
 I had to face Apple in court anyways, and only had one real chance to go 
 after Apple on everything they’ve done to me, that I better include it 
 all - and I did. I filed a RICO Act lawsuit against Apple yesterday. \n\nMy 
 complaint includes claims for whistleblower retaliation under 
 Sarbanes-Oxley and Dodd-Frank Acts which have exclusive jurisdiction in 
 federal courts, so I filed to the US District Court in San Francisco. (I 
 “kicked-out” my SOX charge from the US Department of Labor as I have 
 given up on them actually fulfilling their statutory obligations after 
 their ongoing obstruction and recent extortionattempts). I also removed my 
 California Department of Labor case from the state agency and into the 
 civil case, which they allow, probably because it takes years for them to 
 even start to investigate. \n\nWhile the logistics will be hectic because I 
 now live in New York (I moved across the country to escape Apple’s 
 deranged harassment), I filed in California because I included a number of 
 California claims including the state Whistleblower Protection Act, 
 California Labor Codes prohibiting terminations in retaliation for filing 
 safety complaints or discussing work conditions, and violations of the Bane 
 Civil Rights Act and Ralph Civil Rights Act. The Bane Act prohibits use of 
 threats and intimidation to interfere with California resident’s exercise 
 of their civil rights. The Ralph Civil Rights Act prohibits threats of 
 violence against persons and property because of a person’s protected 
 characteristic and membership of protected groups. One of those protected 
 characteristics is “position in a labor dispute.” The list is not 
 exclusive, so I also claimed membership in groups of privacy and 
 environmental health activists, and membership in the group of “victims 
 of environmental crime.”\n\nMy biggest concern about the two-year statute 
 of limitations is it would impact my claim for a termination in violation 
 of public policy (Tamney claim) under state law. Apple’s supposed 
 “legitimate” justification for terminating me is itself a gross 
 violation of California law. California provides a Constitutional right to 
 privacy that cannot be waived in private contract or in employment, and it 
 protects an employee’s right to protest egregious invasions of their 
 privacy by their employer, even if they previously “consented” (ie, 
 polygraph tests). California Labor code also prohibits employers from video 
 recording employees in the bathroom and locker rooms. California law also 
 prohibits terminations of employees for engaging in constitutionally 
 protected off-duty conduct. Finally, I also incorporated the FTC Act and 
 its prohibition on developing commercial products based on nonconsensual, 
 or otherwise unlawful, data. Among other remedies, I also requested the 
 disgorgement of products made based on photos, videos, and other personal 
 data provided through employee coercion, not actual consent — and an 
 order prohibiting Apple from continuing their weird medical experiments and 
 personal data harvesting on their employees. \n\nApple lost a Tamney claim 
 prior from another employee in a similar situation to me, as he reported 
 literal criminal activity and Apple fired him for reporting the criminal 
 activity, and argued to a judge they can fire employees for whatever reason 
 they want - and the Judge had to explain in detail that employers 
 cannotfire employees for reporting crimes. (see, Banko v Apple I, and Banko 
 v Apple II).\n\nFinally, I also included three charges of violations of the 
 RICO Act, under 1962 § 1962 (a), (b), and (c). I learned a lot about the 
 Act while doing legal research for this case. Apparently, if an employer 
 terminates an employee in a way that constitutes an indictable criminal act 
 that is on the enumerated list of Predicate Acts for RICO, it can then 
 establish a RICO case with additional related Predicate Acts. Apple fired 
 me in an egregious violation of 18 USC §§ 1512 and 1513, with me even 
 complaining of witness intimidation as they did the deed. With that 
 Predicate Act, I was able to weave in their additional violations of 1512 
 and 1513, their wire fraud and mail fraud, my complaints about Securities 
 Fraud, and my complaints about state criminal bribery and extortion. This 
 also opened the door to include Predicate Acts of Tom Moyer’s criminal 
 bribery charge, Nancy Heinen’s Securities Fraud charges, and Gene 
 Levoff’s Securities Fraud convictions. I also found a surprising doorway 
 into integrating my toxic tort claims and Apple’s many environmental law 
 violations which I will write about in detail later. Briefly, I embedded it 
 under Mail Fraud and Wire Fraud (relating to CERCLA, RCRA, SARA, and Clean 
 Air Act violations), and violations of 18 USC § 229 (“relating to 
 Chemical Weapons”, see Bond v US).\nYou can read the complaint here: 
 Ashley Gjovik v Apple, 3:23-cv-04597-LB, United States District Court, 
 Northern District of California, San Francisco Division.\n\nApple’s Chief 
 Compliance Officer is Re-Indicted for Criminal Bribery\n\nTom Moyer’s 
 been Apple’s Chief Compliance Office for over a decade. (He’s also head 
 of “Global Security” but without the organization reporting to him and 
 I believe he is actually the current head of Worldwide Loyalty). In his CCO 
 role, Moyer is supposedly responsible for ensuring Apple employees comply 
 with legal and regulatory obligations, including anti-bribery laws. \n\nIn 
 January 2021, Moyer was arraigned for a charge of criminal bribery after 
 being indicted by a grand jury (the testimony for which exceeded 1,200 
 pages and the evidence included an undercover investigation). [Indictment | 
 Press Release from SCC DA] \n\nTwo Apple Global Security Directors flipped 
 on Moyer and Apple, turning state’s evidence and testifying against him 
 in exchange for immunity. Three Facebook Security Managers also pleaded 
 guilty to misdemeanor charges. One of the Facebook Managers also flipped 
 and wore wire to capture additional evidence. [Indictment | Press Release 
 from SCC DA] The CEO of the Facebook contracted security company pleaded 
 guilty to felony charges. [Press Release from SCC DA]\n\nMoyer’s charge 
 arose out of a bribery scheme with the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s 
 office. Apple wanted additional Carrying a Concealed Weapon (CCW) permits 
 for Apple’s private security team. The Sheriff’s office asked for 
 political donations and around $80,000 worth of iPads in exchange for 
 approving the permits.\n\nIt also was exposed during the investigation that 
 Apple had recently “donated” $558,969 to the Sheriff’s office in 
 exchange for two dedicated Police Officers to work Apple Park and a 
 commercial area just south of Apple Park, which also includes several Apple 
 offices and where Apple employees frequent for meals and drinks. [Video of 
 City Council Meeting].\n\nAlso curious is Apple’s efforts to obtain CCW 
 permits instead of BSIS permits. BSIS Security permits allow exposed carry 
 during work hours. Requesting CCW permits allows concealed carry outside of 
 work hours. [CCW | BSIS] Why does Apple Global Security need concealed 
 handguns outside work hours but for work purposes? Are the Apple 
 “security” personnel these CCW permits were intended for, not licensed 
 private security guards under BPC § 7582.1?\n\nIn June 2021, the charge 
 against Moyer was unexpectedly dismissed sua sponte by a trial Judge Eric 
 Geffon. Judge Geffon reported in his 2021-2022 Form 700filings that he owns 
 between $100,001-$1,000,000 worth of Apple stock. It is unclear why he did 
 not recuse himself from the matter. During the hearing, the Judge claimed 
 there was no corrupt intent on Moyer’s part and thus he did not commit 
 bribery. Santa Clara District Attorney Jeff Rosen protested the 
 dismissal.\n“We believe that the criminal grand jury – the 19 citizens 
 who heard direct evidence and from witnesses in this public corruption case 
 – correctly indicted Mr. Moyer for bribery,” Rosen said. “We stand by 
 the grand jury’s decision and are evaluating our options.” (2021)\n\nIn 
 August 2023, District Attorney Rosen won an appeal in state appellate 
 court. The Sixth Appellate District Court of Appeals found there was 
 corrupt intent on Moyer’s part. Moyer apparently had argued that it 
 wasn’t bribery because he was providing payment on behalf of Apple, not 
 himself; that he was providing the payment to the Sheriff’s Office, not 
 the specific Undersheriff he was speaking with; and that the Undersheriff 
 asked him for the bribe and it wasn’t unlawful for him to accept. The 
 Appellate court disagreed on all points and re-instated the charge of 
 criminal bribery against Moyer. The decision also revealed new facts about 
 what occurred, including Moyer’s involvement in “clandestine 
 meetings” and falsifying a paper trail. [Decision]\n“Moyer is right 
 back where he should be,” Rosen said in a statement. “On the trial 
 calendar and charged with bribery.” (2023)\n\nRemarkably, Apple has not 
 only retained Moyer in his current position, but has made statements 
 publicly supporting Moyer. Apple claimed: "After learning of the 
 allegations, we conducted a thorough internal investigation and found no 
 wrongdoing." Reading the facts and evidence noted in the appellate 
 decision, it seems impossible that Apple would have actually investigated 
 and found no wrongdoing. Apple must have felt confident the charge against 
 Moyer would somehow disappear.\n\nSentencing Delays for Apple’s Corporate 
 Secretary Convicted of Fraud\n\nSpeaking of falsifying paper trails… 
 Apple has a long track record of it’s corporate secretaries being charged 
 with fraud. In 2007, Apple General Counsel and Corporate Secretary Nancy 
 Heinen was charged with an impressive number and variety of securities 
 fraud offenses. Among other things, she allegedly drafted and signed off on 
 minutes for an Apple Board meeting that never happened, falsifying a paper 
 trail to support a scheme to grant the executives larger stock bonuses. 
 Heinen settled with the SEC in 2008 and paid $2.2M to avoid a trial. [Press 
 Release: SEC]\n\nThen, in February 2019, Apple VP of Corporate law and 
 Corporate Secretary, Gene Levoff, was charged with 12 counts of fraud. 
 [Press Releases from SEC | DOJ; Complaint]. Levoff oversaw Apple’s 
 Insider Trading compliance program and was responsible for ensuring Apple 
 employees did not engage in insider trading. The six counts of securities 
 fraud and six counts of wire fraud were based on Levoff engaging in Insider 
 Trading. Levoff’s defense at trial was, among other interesting claims, 
 that Insider Trading laws violate the US Constitution and therefore cannot 
 be enforced against him. In 2020, Levoff’s Motion to Dismiss was Denied 
 with a Judge confirming that Insider Trading laws are Constitutional, and 
 enforceable, and Levoff should know that because it was his job. [Court 
 Ruling]. In 2022, in a settlement deal, Levoff pleaded guilty to six of the 
 charges, which spanned five years at Apple (2011-2016). [Press Release: 
 DOJ] \n\nLevoff still has not been sentenced and it is unclear why. His 
 sentencing date was Nov 10 2022. He faces a maximum of twenty years is 
 prison and $5M fine for each charge.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/07/23/18868166.php
SUMMARY:Silicon Toxic Dumpsites, Workers Health & Safety & the RICO Case Against Apple
LOCATION:By Zoom
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2024/07/23/18868166.php
DTSTART:20240724T003000Z
DTEND:20240724T003000Z
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