Facebook’s Wanna-Be Co-Owner Arrested for Fraud

Remember Paul Ceglia, the New York businessman who claimed Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg gave him a 50 percent stake in the social media behemoth? Well, it turns out federal prospectors didn’t buy it.

Early Friday the 39-year-old Ceglia was arrested at his Wellsville, N.Y., home and charged with one count of mail fraud and one count of wire fraud. Each carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison – ouch!

Last year Ceglia, in an amended lawsuit against Zuckerberg and Facebook, claimed that in 2003 Zuckerberg agreed to enter a business relationship that would give Ceglia a 50 percent state in a company called “The Face Book,” which later became Facebook. Ceglia even pointed to a contract that Zuckerberg allegedly signed in April 2003.

Busted

Trouble is, according to prosecutors, the contract was doctored and the only legitimate thing on it was the signature. In actuality, they say, the contract called for Ceglia to pay the then Harvard student Zuckerberg for coding work used on Ceglia’s online business StreetFax.com.

Ceglia’s multi-billion dollar lawsuit are likely to come to a halting stop, given this latest legal turn. Preet Bharara, Manhattan U.S. Attorney, said: “Ceglia’s alleged conduct not only constitutes a massive fraud attempt, but also an attempted corruption of our legal system through the manufacture of false evidence. That is always intolerable. Dressing up a fraud as a lawsuit does not immunize you from prosecution.”

About Dawn Kawamoto

Dawn Kawamoto is the associate editor of Dice. She is an award-winning technology and business reporter, previously working for such publications as CNET's News.com where she reported on a wide range of sectors from enterprise software to mobile computing to Internet darlings and the funding that fueled their growth. In 2002, she was a Gerald Loeb Awards finalist for coverage on Oracle's sales practices.

Comments

  1. BY COMPUTER SCIENCE GRAD says:

    I know it’s not funny when someone ruins their life with years of imprisonment, but how dillusional was he to think he could actually get away with this?

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