Tag: ebay
Hulu's Sarah Lawrence 'Cult' Series Omits Bernard Kerik's Creepy History

Hulu's Sarah Lawrence 'Cult' Series Omits Bernard Kerik's Creepy History

Hulu’s three-part documentary series Stolen Youth: Inside the Cult of Sarah Lawrence is getting a lot of attention — but perhaps not the right kind.

The upshot of the story is this: Returning citizen Larry Ray bunked with his daughter at Sarah Lawrence College when he was released from prison. He ended up gaslighting his daughter’s roommates enough that he convinced them they owed him thousands upon thousands of dollars — and that his and their lives were in danger because former New York Police Commissioner Bernard “Bernie” Kerik had a team of people stalking Ray after he turned Kerik in to the FBI for the charges that eventually led to his four-year prison sentence and cost him a Bush administration appointment as secretary of homeland security.

Ray’s stories were outlandish and false. There’s no evidence that Kerik targeted Ray, yet bright young people — students at Sarah Lawrence and Columbia University and a psychiatry resident at UCLA/USC — believed his fantasy.

It’s unfathomable to the average audience, mostly because the series doesn’t mention Kerik’s history of harassing and stalking his detractors. Knowing how Kerik operates, which the cult members did, makes it easier to understand why up-and-coming adults, those with potential to succeed in ways most people never do, fell for Ray’s histrionics.

The crime Ray described is called gang stalking, and it refers to harassment and intimidation tactics used by a group of individuals against another person or toward a smaller group of people.

Some psychiatric professionals don’t acknowledge gang stalking as an actual phenomenon; they consider it a “novel persecutory belief system” which means there’s no stalking and the alleged victim is simply paranoid or a QAnon adherent.

Formal research has been conducted into gang stalking; the few academic studies do their best not to deny the existence of the activity, but thinking one is gang-stalked nevertheless comes off as a manifestation of mental illness. One study quoted the answers to the question of why targets thought they were being stalked, and they sound decidedly kooky:

“It is part of an overt agenda to create and test mind control. They are creating weaponry tested on us.”

“I am watched (sic) for 30 years after they put in the implants to see what the implants did to me.”

“Because I refused to join their devil cult and become an operative, I became a victim. My invitation to join came at an early stage via voice-to-skull.” Voice to skull is a technology that transmits sound into the skull of a person or animals.

We shouldn’t write off these accounts of gang stalking automatically; sometimes these stories are real. This became clear recently when it was revealed that a group of eBay employees, including two members of its executive leadership team, stalked and harassed two e-commerce bloggers, Ina and David Steiner of Natick, Massachusetts. The Steiners had criticized some of the auction site’s policies, including outsized executive pay, on their blog EcommerceBytes.

As well as sending threatening messages, eBay employees sent deliveries to the Steiners’ home, including a book on surviving the death of a spouse (the implication being one of them was headed to the graveyard soon), a funeral wreath (because eBay is nothing if not socially adept when it comes to acknowledging a death in the family), a bloody pig Halloween mask, a fetal pig, and live insects. They also posed as the Steiners on Craigslist and asked anyone reading the ads to show up at their home and knock on the door for a sexual tryst. For good measure, they ordered $70 of pizza to be delivered at 4:30 a.m.

This was the best the team could come up with after James Baugh, eBay’s senior director of safety and security, showed the 1988 Anthony Michael Hall film Johnny Be Good, in which two friends send pizzas, an elephant, a stripper, an exterminator, and Hare Krishna missionaries to their football coach’s home.

The only reason why the Natick Police Department was able to unspool all the crazy — and prevent Baugh from delivering a bag of human feces, a running chainsaw ,and a rat to the Steiner’s front porch — was that David Steiner managed to get a picture of the license plate on a car that was tailing him and it was traced back to a rental agency. Seven eBay employees were criminally convicted for this gang-up, the last one just this past January.

Their narrative was completely unembellished, but if David or Ina Steiner had said to someone “I think eBay is sending me fetal pigs and pizza,” a psychiatrist would have filled them to the gills with Haldol.

Being gang-stalked by Kerik and his crew was a fiction of the odious Larry Ray, a misrepresentation that served his degradation of young minds, but these team terrorizations do happen — and they happen to many people who associate with Bernie Kerik.

It’s not like Kerik didn’t foreshadow this to all of us. According to a whistleblower report, the convicted felon gave a speech back when he was New York City's corrections commissioner that included a vow to make anyone miserable who had been disloyal to him and a warning that he had been an effective ‘hunter of men’ and would hunt down those who didn’t display sufficient fealty.

And it looks like he lived up to the promise. When he broke up with one of his mistresses, publisher Judith Regan, he called her while she was dining out with another man and described what she was eating. According to Regan, he had her followed to Los Angeles and called her to inform her he was following her son back to college in Massachusetts. Regan looked crazy, too; an associate of Regan’s described her to the New York Post as “raving” about Kerik’s stalking her.

Kerik didn’t leave these hijinks behind after he was incarcerated from 2010 to 2013.

Dara D’Addio sent the married Kerik a card while he was doing time and they started a non-physical but intimate relationship wherein she ended up essentially co-authoring his memoir. Kerik mailed her 135 letters, made 150 phone calls to her personal unlisted number, and sent her 735 emails. But when Kerik didn’t invite her to his homecoming party, she ceased contact and asked him to do the same.

Instead, Kerik started threatening and harassing her through a third party. On her blog, “Doing Time with Bernie,” D’Addio says Kerik pledged "to destroy [her] life."

It’s the same modus operandi that infused Kerik’s support for former president Donald Trump. The House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the Capitol subpoenaed Kerik in November 2021 and he provided papers, among them a 22-page “strategic communications plan” he wrote, to be implemented between December 27, 2020 and January 6, 202. The plan targeted elected officials who wouldn't buy into the lie that the 2020 presidential election was stolen. Kerik wanted the home of Jocelyn Benson, Michigan's secretary of state, to be surrounded.

There’s no defense to Larry Ray’s reign over the Sarah Lawrence students — literally. The Hulu series secured the video Ray recorded of his abuse from the court file; Ray’s attorney had used it at trial in an attempt to show that her client really believed his story.

But Kerik sports a verifiable record of attacking, stalking, and seeking to destroy any critics, people who did less damage to him than Ray did. Believing Ray wasn’t as crazy as this series makes it appear.

Chandra Bozelko did time in a maximum-security facility in Connecticut. While inside she became the first incarcerated person with a regular byline in a publication outside of the facility. Her “Prison Diaries" column ran in The New Haven Independent, and she later established a blog under the same name that earned several professional awards. Her columns now appear regularly in The National Memo.

eBay To Spin Off PayPal Into Standalone Company

eBay To Spin Off PayPal Into Standalone Company

New York (AFP) – U.S. online auction giant eBay on Tuesday announced plans to spin off its PayPal unit, a move designed to help it compete better in the fast-moving online payments segment.

The plan, to take effect next year, comes after months of pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn, who had assailed eBay for poor management and claimed that keeping eBay tied with PayPal depressed the value of both units.

An eBay statement said that a board review concluded that “a changing competitive landscape creates enormous opportunities for eBay and PayPal” and that “separation will create sharper strategic focus and better position each business to capitalize on those growth opportunities as independent companies.”

Company president and chief executive John Donahoe said that “for more than a decade eBay and PayPal have mutually benefited from being part of one company, creating substantial shareholder value.

“However, a thorough strategic review with our board shows that keeping eBay and PayPal together beyond 2015 clearly becomes less advantageous to each business strategically and competitively.”

The move comes with the online payments segment facing new challenges from the likes of Apple, which introduced a mobile payments platform using its iPhones, and newcomers such as Square.

“The pace of industry change and innovation in commerce and payments requires maximum flexibility to stay competitive and drive global leadership,” the eBay statement said.

Current eBay shareholders will receive stock in the future PayPal in proportion to their current holdings, the company said in a statement.

The split will give shareholders “more targeted investment opportunities” and will increase the value of the company over the long term, the statement said.

PayPal accounted for 41 percent of eBay’s revenues last year and has more than 152 million active users.

Donahue and chief financial officer Bob Swan will lead the transition of both businesses, the statement said. But they will not hold executive management roles in the two new companies.

The “new” eBay will be led by Devin Wenig, current president of eBay Marketplaces.

The independent PayPal will be headed by Dan Schulman, who comes from American Express after holding top jobs at AT&T, Priceline, and Virgin Mobile.

eBay acquired PayPal in 2002 for roughly $1.5 billion in shares, integrating the payment service that had already been widely used for online auctions.

AFP Photo/Justin Sullivan

EBay Refuses To Sell Antique Car Once Belonging To Hermann Goering

EBay Refuses To Sell Antique Car Once Belonging To Hermann Goering

By Anne Geggis, Sun Sentinel

BOCA RATON, Fla. — What Boca Raton auto dealers consider a war trophy symbolic of America’s finest triumph is proving too hot to handle.
The online auction site, eBay, has declined to post for auction a 1941 Mercedes Benz 540K Cabriolet that was special-ordered by Hitler henchman Hermann Goering and is now being restored by High Velocity Classics and European Cars of Boca.

And eBay’s refusal will end chances that the car gets high-profile attention, fears Steven Saffer, general manager of High Velocity Classics.

“We’re almost at a dead end,” he said.

Right now, the car is also listed on WarHistoryOnline.com. It’s currently in pieces in North Carolina and needs to be reassembled. Saffer estimates that it’s going to cost about $750,000 to restore it. Restored, the car will be worth between $5 million and $7 million, Saffer estimates.

Ideally, Saffer said, a group of wealthy Jews will be interested in purchasing it for display in a museum such as Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. Hitler’s Grosser Mercedes is on display at a Canadian war museum.

He doesn’t want to see Goering’s former ride sit in a garage. Cars restored by the sister-company to his, European Cars of Boca, have won a number of car show contests in Boca Raton, Amelia Island, and Pebble Beach.

“It’s too valuable as a piece of history,” he said.

Ryan Moore, a spokesman for eBay in an email: “EBay has policies that prohibit the sale of offensive materials and content, including Nazi-related items.”

But there is a fine line between what some see as historical artifacts and what others consider offensive.

Saffer said that he considers the Goering car a piece of history and that eBay’s refusal amounts to a kind of denial of its significance.
But eBay is following its established policy, which prohibit items that promote or glorify hatred, violence, racial, sexual, or religious intolerance. And, in practice, that means a ban on the sale of specific items from Nazi Germany — the only political regime that’s specifically mentioned in eBay’s banned list.

Books with the Nazi swastika on the cover can be sold, but those published between 1933 and 1945 are allowed only if they were published outside Germany.

Nazi currency, stamps, and letters with the Nazi postmark can be sold on eBay, but no medals from the 1936 Olympics are allowed. In addition to items that Goering owned or was affiliated with, eBay also bans items that come directly from Adolf Hitler, Joseph Goebbels, Rudolf Hess, Reinhard Heydrich, and Heinrich Himmler.

High Velocity’s Saffer, who is Jewish, said eBay’s refusal may make it more difficult to find the right place for Goering’s car, which was outfitted with a special parade platform, police sirens, and a shortwave radio.

Goering, who used the car in parades and long distance travel, commanded the Luftwaffe (German air force) and ordered another official to come up with the “final solution to the Jewish question,” according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.

Saffer says he has the documents from Mercedes and the U.S. Army to prove this vehicle was Goering’s and was seized in the last days of World War II. It was found by the 7th Infantry of the U.S. Army and soon became the staff car of Col. John Heintges, after it was painted green with a white command star, Saffer says.

Photo via WikiCommons

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eBay Ends Icahn Dispute With Board Appointment

eBay Ends Icahn Dispute With Board Appointment

New York (AFP) – Online retail giant eBay said Thursday it had reached a deal with activist investor Carl Icahn, who had demanded a spinoff of the payment division PayPal.

Icahn, who had been leading a campaign to split up the eCommerce giant, reached a deal with eBay that calls for the naming of a new independent member of the board of directors.

The company said it agreed to Icahn’s suggestion to appoint former AT&T chairman and chief executive David Dorman as an independent director.

The deal ends a months-old dispute with Icahn, who had assailed eBay for poor management and claimed that keeping eBay tied with PayPal depressed the value of both units.

“We are very pleased to have reached this agreement with Mr. Icahn, settling proxy issues and enabling our board and management team to focus our full attention on a goal every shareholder agrees on — growing PayPal and eBay, and delivering sustainable shareholder value,” said eBay’s president and chief executive John Donahoe.

“As a result of our conversations, it became clear that Carl and I strongly agree on the potential of PayPal and our company. I respect Carl’s willingness to work together to drive sustainable shareholder value today and into the future. His record shows that he has done this with many other companies in the past.”

Icahn said in a Twitter message: “Extremely pleased about agreement with $EBAY. Believe it’s a win-win for ALL shareholders.”

The billionaire investor has a long history of taking positions in companies that give him the leverage to force changes in management or provide dividends to shareholders.

The news of the Icahn campaign began in January, when the company notified shareholders that the corporate raider had called for the spinoff of PayPal.

Icahn holds only about two percent of eBay shares but he has a reputation that magnifies his influence. He sent several open letters to eBay shareholders criticizing management and calling for a shakeup on the board.

In a March 12 letter, Icahn launched a scathing attack, complaining of “a complete and utter breakdown in the system of checks and balances” and arguing that eBay sold off its Skype unit prematurely and that “$4 billion of upside was lost.”

“While the board and its advisers may try to use tricks and technicalities to keep documentary evidence of malfeasance out of the hands of stockholders, I believe that ultimately truth will win out,” he wrote.

In recent months Icahn has also taken aim at Apple, claiming that the tech giant should return more to shareholders.

But in February, he stepped back and said Apple had accomplished much of what he was seeking with some $14 billion in share buybacks.

Icahn is ranked by Forbes magazine as one of the world’s wealthiest individuals with a net worth of some $23 billion.

AFP Photo Brian Harkin