Timberwolves exec had hard drive stolen with ‘strategic NBA information’ on it copied, charge says

That information falling into the hands of another team could be especially damaging to the on-court success of Wolves in the highly competitive NBA.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
March 21, 2024 at 12:04PM
Sachin Gupta (Carlos Gonzalez)

A work hard drive holding sensitive strategic team information was stolen from the Target Center office of the head of the Minnesota Timberwolves’ analytics department and copied last month by a disgruntled subordinate, according to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday.

Sachin Gupta got the hard drive back a little more than a week later but not before roughly 5,700 files were copied that held employment and player contracts, “as well as strategic NBA information.” Also on the hard drive were Gupta’s tax returns and other financial information, and his login and passwords from a password management app, the complaint read.

As head of the analytics department, Gupta had sensitive, proprietary data in his possession that the Wolves conceal from other teams, like information about players and decision-making, contracts or trade negotiations. The dissemination of information of that nature to other teams could be damaging to the success of the Wolves in the highly competitive NBA.

The team fired Somak Sarkar, 33, after learning of the hard drive’s disappearance. He was arrested Monday and charged in Hennepin County District Court with felony third-degree burglary. Sarkar remains jailed with bail set at $40,000 ahead of a court appearance Thursday.

Questioned by police after his arrest, Sarkar said that as a member of the coaching staff he had Gupta’s hard drive to “put some stuff on it” but forgot to return it, according to the complaint.

The team released a statement to the Star Tribune that it’s “aware of these allegations and will have no further comment as it is an ongoing legal matter.”

Sarkar has been in NBA front offices since he interned with the Houston Rockets in 2012 while on his way to graduating in 2013 from Rice University, according to the Texas school’s Department of Sports Management. He landed his first permanent job in NBA with the New Orleans Pelicans later that year as a strategic analyst, his Rice online profile said.

While in New Orleans, he crossed paths with several people currently working for the Wolves, including head coach Chris Finch, assistant coach Kevin Hanson and front office assistant Dell Demps.

Sarkar spent a year with the New York Knicks before joining the Wolves in August 2021. He was originally the team’s coaching analyst, which acts as a liaison between the coaching staff and the analytics department. He first reported to the analytics department, but that changed in June 2023 and he then reported to coaches.

Details of the suspected theft are spelled out in the complaint and a search warrant affidavit filed by police seeking court permission to look for evidence in Sarkar’s apartment near Target Center, including the discovery of any “monies to show profit of the sale of the stolen financial information and proprietary Timberwolves information.”

A search of the apartment turned up several hard drives, a computer, three tablets and multiple USB drives, the complaint read. Police then determined that one of the devices “contained all the information from [Gupta’s] hard drive.”

According to the court documents, Gupta met with police March 4 and said Sarkar had worked in analytics for the coaches until last summer but was reassigned after “butting heads” with his immediate superior, incorrectly entering computer coding and missing meetings.

Gupta told Sarkar of the transfer over a beer. Gupta said he thought the news went down well, but that Sarkar became standoffish from that point.

On Feb. 2, Gupta left his hard drive on his desk connected to one of his two laptops. Late in the afternoon of Feb. 3, a Saturday, security video captured Sarkar entering Gupta’s office. He then exited, looked around, went back into the office and left a minute later.

Gupta came back to work Feb. 5 and saw his hard drive was missing.

On Feb. 9, Sarkar was fired without explanation and escorted by security from the building.

An analysis of Sarkar’s work computer found that he used his device to open Gupta’s hard drive.

On Feb. 12, a friend of Sarkar’s who is also a Wolves employee got the hard drive and brought it to Gupta. A forensic analysis revealed that 1,200 files were copied on Feb. 11 in one instance and another 4,500 later that same day.

“Gupta is concerned that Sarkar is going to disseminate the proprietary Timberwolves information and his private information,” one of the court documents reads.

Gupta came to the Wolves in 2019 when then-President Gersson Rosas brought him aboard as executive vice president, the front office’s No. 2 position. Rosas was hired in May 2019.

After the team fired Rosas in September 2021, Gupta became interim head of basketball operations for the 2021-22 season.

The team did not hire Gupta for that role permanently and instead chose Tim Connelly from Denver in May 2022. Gupta has remained with the Wolves as executive vice president, leading the analytics department under Connelly.

about the writers

about the writers

Paul Walsh

Reporter

Paul Walsh is a general assignment reporter at the Star Tribune. He wants your news tips, especially in and near Minnesota.

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Chris Hine

Sports reporter

Chris Hine is the Timberwolves reporter at the Minnesota Star Tribune.

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