The company went on to accuse others of similar theft. Former vehicle manufacturing head Bill Strickland supposedly took "thousands" of documents, while staffers Christoph Kuttner and Sohel Merchant may have taken files as well. None of them have been named in the lawsuit, however.

Whether or not that's how things happened isn't clear. Faraday believed that Krause asked the company's human resources director to backdate his resignation to cover up his plans, but The Verge sources understand that Krause resigned in October. It also doesn't gel with Faraday's assertion that Krause was fired.

This isn't the first time Faraday has taken legal action against would-be rivals (it sent a cease-and-desist notice to Indi EV over similar allegations), but it may be the most serious. It also underscores the loyalty issues the company has had for months. Its financial uncertainty and shrinking ambitions haven't exactly inspired confidence, and a cash infusion in late 2017 came only after it had lost hundreds of employees. These kinds of lawsuits might be less likely going forward, but it's notable that they happened at all.