Amazon manager stole $273,000 of PC parts amid chip shortage

An Amazon operations manager has admitted to stealing PC components worth over a quarter of a million dollars from one of the e-commerce giant’s warehouses.

Douglas Wright pled guilty to mail fraud for stealing merchandise from Amazon worth over $273,000. The 27-year old was able to obtain these products due to his role as an operations manager at an Amazon warehouse located in Charlotte.

Helen H. Richardson/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

According to a Department of Justice report, Wright took advantage of his ability to access Amazon’s computers in order to ship items from the warehouse to his home address. These products were predominantly related to PC components, including internal hard drives, processors, and GPUs.

Recommended Videos

Wright further admitted in court that he sold these PC components for a profit by selling them to a computer wholesale company in California. He began stealing the merchandise from June 2020 until September 2021.

The FBI and the United States Postal Inspection Service investigated the case, which culminated in Wright pleading guilty to mail fraud charges on January 28. This particular charge carries a potential sentence of 20 years in prison, in addition to a $250,000 fine. A sentencing date has not been set yet.

It’s unclear exactly how much Wright generated in profits by selling items such as CPUs and graphics cards, but considering the scarcity of stock and soaring demand for such products, it’s safe to assume he was making a pretty penny over the 15 month period he was running the scheme.

With a worldwide shortage of valuable PC parts such as graphics cards and CPUs, we’ve seen similar cases emerge since the pandemic began. Criminals have exploited the situation for the chance to sell products in a market where inflated prices have become the norm. For example, robbers successfully hijacked a truck carrying EVGA RTX 30-series graphics cards in 2021. These Nvidia video cards are currently among some of the most coveted PC components due to the GPU shortage, with the prices of the cards on the truck ranging from $330 to nearly $2,000.

Some of the stolen EVGA graphics cards eventually turned up at a Vietnamese retailer, which is well beyond the reach of U.S. law enforcement agencies. Elsewhere, smugglers attempted to transport ​​300 crypto mining GPUs that could have been worth an estimated $219,600 from Hong Kong to the U.S.

Looking ahead, both CPU and GPU prices are set to rise even further throughout 2022 due to an increase in silicon costs.

Editors' Recommendations

Former Digital Trends Contributor
Zak Islam was a freelance writer at Digital Trends covering the latest news in the technology world, particularly the…
Get this HP 17-inch laptop for $300 instead of the usual $660

Seventeen-inch laptops toe the line between portability and size, making them more expensive than your average laptop. Some of the best 17-inch laptops can easily cost you thousands of dollars. Luckily, there HP has come up with a very budget-friendly solution in the form of the HP laptop 17z, and while it's not one of the best laptops on the market, it is an excellent budget-oriented choice for a 17-inch laptop. Even better, HP currently discounts it down to $300 from the usual $560 price tag, which is a significant $260 off.

Buy Now

Read more
Get a lifetime of 1TB cloud storage for $160

One thing about most of the best cloud storage services that you're sure not to like is having to pay for them. Again and again, month after month, they ask for money to continue holding your files. It makes sense, in a way, as their servers take constant real estate and electricity to maintain. Now, though, you can get a lifetime of terabyte cloud storage on Koofr for just $160. The usual price would be $810, so this saves you $650 in total. And, naturally, Koofr's cloud storage has special features that you'll want to know about, too. So, go ahead and tap the button below to find the deal — it'll only be going on for a limited amount of time — and continue reading to see why we like this deal and what makes Koofr special.

BUY NOW

Read more
The 5 best things you can do with Copilot Pro right now

Copilot Pro is Microsoft’s AI subscription service that costs $20 per month for individuals and is integrated into the brand’s Microsoft 365 suite. The paid service offers unique features to Microsoft users, provides faster and more consistent AI performance with priority access to the GPT-4 and GPT-4 Turbo large language models (LLM) during peak times, and also brings the AI technology to the brand’s most popular PC applications -- and that's where things get really interesting.

Here are some of the best features on Copilot Pro and how they work.
Create custom GPTs

Read more