In 2014, Randy and Kristy Pitchford found that they needed a personal assistant to help manage their busy lives. He was the CEO of Borderlands maker Gearbox Software, she the owner of the Dallas-area gaming-themed cafe Nerdvana. They hired John Wright Martin, who worked for the couple for two years. In 2016, they parted ways. Now, the Pitchfords say that Martin embezzled millions of dollars from them.
As the Dallas Morning News reported over the weekend, Martin has been accused by the Pitchfords and others of theft and forgery. Though he was only paid $45,000 a year, he seemed to have maintained a lavish lifestyle full of designer brand clothing and luxurious parties. It wasnât until early 2017, several months after Martin had left their employ, that Kristy Pitchford said she realized money was missing from one of the holding accounts for Nerdvana.
According to the Dallas Morning News story, the couple confronted Martin. When he failed to pay the money back, the Pitchfordsâ lawyer drafted an agreement demanding repayment of $780,000, which Martin apparently signed but never made good on. In August, a district judge in Collin County, Texas issued a warrant for Martinâs arrest after he failed to show up in court to face felony charges of theft and forgery, with the Pitchfords now claiming stolen property in the amount of $3 million.
Martin denied the charges against him in a Facebook message to the Morning News. âI can assure you there is much more to this story than me being charged for crimes I did not commit,â he wrote. âI would like to finally tell my side of the story in hopes of putting a stop to this happening to anyone else in the future.â (Kotaku reached out to Martin for this story, but did not receive a response; Martinâs Facebook page also appears to have been disabled.)
Reached for comment by Kotaku, Randy Pitchford said that the coupleâs lives were quite busy when they hired Martin, and in hindsight, it was a good opportunity for anyone looking to commit the type of fraud heâs alleged to have committed. âThere was a huge amount of activity,â Randy Pitchford told Kotaku via phone. âLittle discrepancies werenât a priority.â
In 2015, Gearbox was moving its offices, Nerdvana was just getting started in the same mixed-use building, and the Pitchfords themselves were moving from their old home into a new house they were having built.
Pitchford said that most of the fraudulent activityâforged checks, payments to an American Express card, and ATM withdrawalsâwere hidden in miscellaneous lines of larger financial reports that didnât raise questions at first because of all the other expenditures associated with getting a new business off the ground. Analysis and forensics after the fact revealed the amounts of missing monthly funds were small in the beginning: a thousand dollars here, a thousand dollars there.It wasnât until the last few months of Martinâs employment that the bulk of the damage was done, which the Pitchfords say included a chartered private jet to Florida to party with friends.
âIâve never flown on a private plane in my life,â Pitchford said. âWe tend to spend our money to build things. He squandered it on superfluous things.â
Martin, Pitchford said, had close proximity to Nerdvanaâs finances, having been tasked with helping to set up the accounts in some instances. In addition to picking up the Pitchfordsâ child from school or assist with other errands, he would also make regular trips to the bank on their behalf. Pitchford said he suspects that this is how Martin was able to get his hands on an ATM card allowing him to withdraw funds directly from business bank accounts.
âWe tend to operate with a high degree of trust,â he told Kotaku. âMost people are awesome.â Martin seemed that way at first, he said. Pitchford said he was quite competent at the job, and they parted on amicable terms when Martin left to pursue a business of his own in interior decorating. It was not until months later, when the Pitchfords discovered one of the Nerdvana holding accounts had been drained of the hundreds of thousands that should have been in there, they knew they had been had. âIâve never experienced anyone like this before,â Pitchford said.
Pitchford said that while Nerdvanaâs business accounts were attacked, Martin never meddled with anything at his game studio Gearbox. âHe didnât have access to enough there,â he said. Pitchford said in a follow-up email that while a police raid on Martinâs residence last year captured some items that were then sold to recover a small portion of the loss, none of the alleged $3 million theft is covered by any kind of insurance, and at this point, the Pitchfords donât believe any more of it will ever be recovered.
âAt this point, weâre just seeking justice and to help prevent his ability to create new victims,â Pitchford said.