Skip to content
  • Insurance Journal
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Carrier Management
Claims Journal - Insurance news and resources for claims adjusters

Featured Stories

  • Restaurants & Bars: Liquor Sales, Risk Transfer And More
  • Cloudiness: Data Center Claims And Specialized Adjusting
  • Allianz: Hail A Growing Loss Driver on Rising SCS Risk Tide
  • Front Page
  • Most Popular
  • AI & Technology
  • Expert Viewpoints
  • Research
  • Videos/Podcasts
  • Newsletters

Mystery Solved? Man Arrested in Thefts of Unpublished Books

By Deepti Hajela | January 7, 2022
Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
Email to a friend Facebook Tweet LinkedIn Print Article
  • Article

NEW YORK (AP)–Authorities say they’ve solved a publishing industry whodunit with the arrest Wednesday of a man accused of numerous literary heists in recent years, allegedly impersonating others in the industry to amass a veritable library of unpublished works.

Filippo Bernardini, an Italian citizen working in publishing in London, was arrested Wednesday after arriving at John F. Kennedy International Airport, said Damian Williams, U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York in a statement.

Bernardini, 29, faces charges including wire fraud, which carries a penalty of up to 20 years in prison, and aggravated identity theft. He was expected to appear in federal court on Thursday. No information on an attorney for him was available.

For years, the publishing industry has been baffled by an international phishing scheme in which someone with apparent inside knowledge impersonated an editor or an agent–by setting up a fake email account–and attempted to trick an author or an editor into sending links to unpublished manuscripts. Works by Margaret Atwood and Ethan Hawke were among those targeted.

The ongoing scheme was all the more mysterious because whoever was seeking the manuscripts was apparently not attempting to sell them or otherwise publicly exploit having them.

“Bernardini allegedly impersonated publishing industry individuals in order to have authors, including a Pulitzer prize winner, send him prepublication manuscripts for his own benefit,” Williams said in the statement. “This real-life storyline now reads as a cautionary tale, with the plot twist of Bernardini facing federal criminal charges for his misdeeds.”

According to the indictment against Bernardini, which was filed in July but only unsealed on Wednesday, the schemes had been taking place from at least August 2016 through July of last year.

It said Bernardini “used fraudulent, look-alike, domains to impersonate individuals involved in the publishing industry to gain surreptitious access to these materials,” and that over the years he “impersonated, defrauded, and attempted to defraud, hundreds of individuals.”

Bernardini collected hundreds of unpublished works, according to the indictment.

In the indictment, Bernardini was described as working in London for a “major, international, US-based publishing house.” A LinkedIn profile for a Filippo B. said he worked for Simon & Schuster.

In a statement, the publisher said it was “shocked and horrified to learn today of the allegations of fraud and identity theft by an employee of Simon & Schuster UK.”

The publisher said Bernardini had been suspended pending additional information, adding, “The safekeeping of our authors’ intellectual property is of primary importance to Simon & Schuster, and for all in the publishing industry, and we are grateful to the FBI for investigating these incidents and bringing charges against the alleged perpetrator.”

Copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Was this article valuable?

Thank you! Please tell us what we can do to improve this article.

Thank you! % of people found this article valuable. Please tell us what you liked about it.

Here are more articles you may enjoy.

Hands-Free Driving Systems Do Not Improve Safety, NTSB Says
Ex-Brookfield VP Claims Wrongful Firing Over Charlie Kirk Post
US Doubles Hormuz Guarantees to $40 Billion With New Partners
Russia-Linked Hackers Hijack Routers to Steal Passwords, UK Says
newsletter

Want to stay up to date?

Get the latest insurance news
sent straight to your inbox.

Email This Subscribe to Newsletter
Email to a friend Facebook Tweet LinkedIn Print Article
  • Categories: International NewsTopics: fake email account, identity thefts, phishing scheme, publishing industry, unpublished works
  • Have a news tip? Email us at newsdesk@claimsjournal.com

See All Comments (0)

More News
El Niño Set to Form by August With Rising Heat and Crop Risks
Convicted Insurance Mogul Lindberg Should Pay $1.6B Restitution to Companies
Berkshire-Owned PacifiCorp Wins Ruling That Could Reduce Wildfire Damages
Toilet Paper Warehouse in California Destroyed by Fire; Employee Arrested
More News Features

Read This Next

  • Mystery Solved? Man Arrested in Thefts of Unpublished Books
  • Wildfires Race Across US as Drought Spans Half the Nation
  • Hail A Growing Loss Driver on Rising Tide of Severe Convective Storm Risk, Allianz Says
  • Convicted Insurance Mogul Lindberg Should Pay $1.6B Restitution to Companies
  • El Niño Set to Form by August With Rising Heat and Crop Risks

Claims News

  • Latest news
  • Most Popular News
  • News by Topic
  • Yesterday

Site Search

Features

  • AI & Technology
  • Expert Viewpoints
  • Claims Videos & Podcasts
  • Claims Jobs
  • Industry Events
  • Newswire

Connect with us

  • Email Newsletters
  • For Your Website
  • RSS Feeds
  • X (Twitter)
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Do Not Sell My Info

Claims Journal

  • Submit News
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us
  • Link to Us

Wells Media Group Network

  • Insurance Journal
  • MyNewMarkets.com
  • Insurance Journal TV
  • Academy of Insurance
  • Carrier Management
© 2026 by Wells Media Group, Inc. Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions | Site Map