Because of the former Executive Director of Netzex on incentives in the form of shares and more than half a million dollars in bribes and commissions from technology companies for consent to contracts with video broadcasts, condemned by a federal jury with 29 charges and money laundering.


According to Arab Net, after Michael Kyle, 49, was taken office as a former deputy president of Netflix and supervised the company's Internet technology department, according to a network FOX Business, and was informed of the Arab.


For its part, Defense lawyer Julia Jin said we were very disappointed in the rule of jury. She added that an innocent person could be condemned when there were a lot of charges against him and there is a strong company, such as Netflex, leading the investigation and prosecution.


Jane pointed to Kyle's contribution to Netflix's success as a sophisticated technology company. She stressed that he intended to appeal to the judgment.


Kyle was charged in 2018 on 19 online scams, and 3 charges of fraud via mail, and seven charges of money laundering. He has pushed that it is not guilty of crimes against him.


The trial began on April 19 in a federal court in San Jose, California. Where the jury found in 28 out of 29 charges against him.


Broadcast "The representatives of prosecution claimed that Kyle has been more than $ 500,000 in bribes - as well as stock options - for consent to decades in millions of dollars to nine technology companies seek to deal With Netflix between February 2012 and July 2014.


The prosecution representatives said Kyle was established and controlled a limited liability company, UNIX Mercenary LLC, to receive bribes and finance personal expenditures and buy a house in Los Gatus, California.


The authorities said Netflex banned its employees conflicting and demanding the conflicting of actual or virtual interests and reporting gifts from people or entities that seek to sell its services to the company.


Kyle, who worked in Netflix during the period from 2011 until July 2014, could face up to 20 years in prison and fines and is likely to be judged within 3 months.