Book Thief Evades Prison Time and Will Pay $88,000 in RestitutionFilippo Bernardini pleaded guilty to stealing more than 1,000 unpublished manuscripts in an elaborate phishing scheme.

ByMadeline Garfinkle

Bloomberg | Getty Images
Non-fiction books published by Random House sit on display at the company's U.K. headquarters in London, U.K.

For almost six years, Filippo Bernardini carried out an elaborateschemewith an unusual motive: reading unpublished work before it hit the shelves.

Starting in at least 2016, Bernardini, 30, used more than160 fraudulent email domainsof real editors, agents and publishing professionals to trick authors into sending him their unpublished manuscripts.

Bernardini used the fraudulent domains to impersonate those close to the authors, demonstrating extensive knowledge of how thepublishing worldworks and who might have access to an author's material. During his almost six-year stint of scamming, Bernardini stole more than 1,000 manuscripts.

Unlike mostscammers, Bernardini's motive was void of monetary aspirations. Instead, the Italian bookworm and former publishing employee simply wanted to read the work before anyone else.

Related:A Retired Teacher and Her Daughter Were Scammed Out of $200,000 Over Email: 'I'm 69 Years Old and Now I'm Broke and Homeless'

In a letter to Colleen McMahon, a federal judge in the Southern District of New York, Bernardini admitted that he never leaked the manuscripts but rather wanted to "be one of the fewest to cherish them before anyone else, before they ended up in bookshops."

"There were times where I read the manuscripts and I felt a special and unique connection with the author, almost like I was the editor of that book,"he added.

Bernardini faced up to21 months in prison, but after pleading guilty, the court ordered him to be deported to either of his former residencies — the UK or Italy — and pay $88,000 in restitution to Penguin Random House instead of doing jail time.

Although Bernardini's scam did not result in any manuscripts being leaked or sold illegally, hundreds of authors were affected by his elaborate ruse to obtain unpublished work.

"You feel violated," one of Bernardini's victims, James Hannaham, toldThe New York Timesin 2020 before Bernardini was caught. "I don't want anyone to know how bad the early drafts of things are."

Wavy Line
Madeline Garfinkle

Entrepreneur Staff

News Writer

Madeline Garfinkle is a News Writer at Entrepreneur.com. She is a graduate from Syracuse University, and received an MFA from Columbia University.

Editor's Pick

Related Topics

Making a Change

Get a Lifetime of Tailored Piano Instruction From This $150 AI App

Perhaps the best part: Learn to play on your own time.

Business News

Doctor's Office Receptionist Arrested for Allegedly Stealing $44,000 From Patients in Square Payment Scam

According to police, the receptionist stole from over 75 patients.

Cryptocurrency / Blockchain

我想买我的杂货加密——是什么Stopping Me?

There are several ways to make crypto's future less daunting to reach.

Growing a Business

Everyone Wants Meaningful Work. But What Does That Look Like, Really?

More people than ever are searching for work that has meaning. But nobody can agree on how to find it, provide it, or even define it. So we set out to try.

Business News

Gap Poaches Top Mattel Exec as Its New CEO in a Bid to Boost Declining Sales

Richard Dickson was hired for his expertise in brand transformation.

Cryptocurrency / Blockchain

Is Cryptocurrency the Future of Real Estate Transactions? Here's What You Should Know.

Discussing cryptocurrency's influence on the real estate industry and what the future may look like.