https://www.buzzfeed.com/josephbernstein/sources-tor-project-board-knew-about-allegations-against-jac

Sources: Tor Project Board Knew Of Allegations Against Jacob Appelbaum For Over 
A Year

Jun. 9, 2016

Joseph Bernstein

   Stories of sexual harassment - and worse - came to light at an emotional 
board dinner. Then the person who revealed them quit to avoid being suspended.

Karen Reilly was in tears. At a February 2015 dinner in Valencia, Spain, she 
had just informed the board of The Tor Project of serial sexual and 
professional harassment by Jacob Appelbaum, a powerful and charismatic figure 
in the information security world, who worked for Tor as an advocate, security 
researcher, and developer. And she couldn't hold it together.

She told them about Appelbaum's public and false claims that he had sex with a 
member of the Tor community - something multiple sources have told BuzzFeed 
News Appelbaum has "done to too many people to count." And she told them of 
darker allegations against him that had come up after a group of disgusted Tor 
community members gathered to share stories.

As she cried, according to someone with knowledge of the dinner, Tor's 
vice-president and director Nick Mathewson told her, "I hope you get counseling 
to help you through this."

On May 25, Appelbaum was finally forced out of Tor amid allegations of sexual 
misconduct. In the past week, The Tor Project (the nonprofit that maintains and 
promotes the anonymous internet routing software of the same name) announced 
Appelbaum's departure, and a series of mostly anonymous allegations against him 
have been published online. They include, at their most serious, accusations of 
rape. In a statement, Appelbaum denied any wrongdoing, calling the stories "a 
calculated and targeted attack ... launched to spread vicious and spurious 
allegations."

A separate statement published last week by Tor Project Executive Director 
Shari Steele - who was not with the organization at the time of the Valencia 
Board meeting - acknowledged that "These types of allegations were not entirely 
new to everybody at Tor; they were consistent with rumors some of us had been 
hearing for some time." But accounts of this dinner make it clear that the most 
important people at Tor knew about Appelbaum's inappropriate behavior, and have 
for more than a year.

The board had gathered early one evening in a restaurant in Valencia during the 
February 2015 Tor Developer Meeting. The Project's leading lights were all at 
the dinner: Roger Dingledine, president and director, and together with 
Mathewson an original developer of the onion router; Wendy Seltzer, Policy 
Counsel to the World Wide Web Consortium and Visiting Fellow with Yale Law 
School's Information Society Project; and Andrew Lewman, the Tor Project's 
since-departed executive director. So was Sue Gardner, who had left her job as 
the executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation and was about to come on 
board with Tor as a strategic advisor. Reilly, who was the Tor Project's 
development director, also attended the dinner.

According to sources, Appelbaum's behavior had been the talk of the conference. 
Reilly had separately approached Lewman, Dingledine, Mathewson, and Seltzer in 
Valencia, and told them of the harassment.

At dinner, the conversation turned to Appelbaum after Gardner, not yet a Tor 
employee, broached the subject. According to a source with knowledge of the 
dinner, Gardner said that her friends had been asking her why she was working 
with an organization that employs a rapist. After that, Reilly "rehashed 
everything."

None of the board members responded to calls or email requests for comment. 
Gardner, reached by phone, said that "The Tor project put out a statement and 
that's all that needs to be said about it."

Following the dinner, according to sources, Tor conducted a human resources 
inquiry into the matter. Both Appelbaum and Reilly were given the option of 
taking a ten day suspension or leaving the company with severance. A copy of 
the letter written to Appelbaum by Tor's then-HR manager Tom Leckrone surfaced 
online earlier this week.

"It was a close call as to whether his benefits outweighed his liabilities," 
said a source with knowledge of the suspension.

Appelbaum took the suspension and remained with the company. Reilly, who, 
according to sources, was facing suspension for spreading rumors about the Tor 
Project, left.

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