Saturday, Apr 20, 2024 | Last Update : 11:32 AM IST

  PIO Internet mogul facing jail time

PIO Internet mogul facing jail time

AP
Published : Aug 13, 2016, 4:04 am IST
Updated : Aug 13, 2016, 4:04 am IST

Gurbaksh Chahal’s rise from a high school dropout to a 25-year-old Internet mogul who sold his startup for $300 million landed him on The Oprah Winfrey Show and Extra in segments touting him as a high

Gurbaksh Chahal (Photo: AP)
 Gurbaksh Chahal (Photo: AP)

Gurbaksh Chahal’s rise from a high school dropout to a 25-year-old Internet mogul who sold his startup for $300 million landed him on The Oprah Winfrey Show and Extra in segments touting him as a highly eligible bachelor.

That image began crumbling when prosecutors charged him with dozens of felonies in 2013, saying surveillance footage from his San Francisco penthouse showed him punching and kicking his girlfriend 117 times and trying to smother her with a pillow. Chahal avoided prison, receiving probation instead, after the woman stopped cooperating with authorities and a judge said the video could not be used as evidence.

Now he’s again facing time behind bars after violating his probation by allegedly kicking another girlfriend, who also didn’t help with the case, prosecutors say. Video of the first attack made it into San Francisco superior court, where a judge was set to sentence the 34-year-old on Friday. Chahal has defended himself against the initial charges, saying he lost his temper but did not hit his girlfriend 117 times. And his attorneys have attacked the second woman’s credibility, saying she got into a sham marriage to get a U.S. visa and had been drinking the night she said Chahal hit her. Chahal’s legal woes extend beyond the criminal cases. Two former employees have sued him for discrimination, painting him as a bullying boss who thought little of women — traits hard to combat in the male-dominated world of Silicon Valley, experts say. “What makes Silicon Valley more challenging than other areas is ... it has a macho culture that is deeply embedded,” said Deborah Rhode, a law professor at Stanford University who teaches gender equity law.

“There are very few women in leadership positions.” Chahal’s criminal attorney, James Lassart, and the lawyer representing him in the lawsuits, Patricia Glaser, did not return emails or phone calls seeking comment.

Emails to a nonprofit foundation Chahal started and his online advertising technology company, Gravity4, were not returned.

A message to his Twitter account also went unanswered. Faced with the initial charges, Chahal got help from powerful former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown and the former chief financial officer for the state of California, Steve Westly, according to one of the lawsuits and emails between Westly and Chahal that the Wall Street Journal reported.

Mr Westly, who was on the board of a company Chahal founded, suggested the businessman reach out to Brown, according to a 2015 lawsuit by Yousef Khraibut, a former Gravity4 employee.

Location: United States, California, San Francisco