The disgraced former Cambridge Analytica CEO has been banned from running limited companies in the UK for seven years for letting staff offer unethical services.
The British governmentâs Insolvency Service said Alexander Nix, had permitted Cambridge Analyticaâs parent firm SCL Elections and its affiliated companies to offer prospective clients a dizzying range of unscrupulous services. They included âbribery or honey trap stings, voter disengagement campaigns, obtaining information to discredit political opponents, and spreading information anonymously in political campaigns.â
Mark Bruce, Chief Investigator for the Insolvency Service, said SCL Elections had repeatedly offered shady political services over a number of years:
Company directors should act with commercial probity and this means acting honestly and correctly. Alexander Nixâs actions did not meet the appropriate standard for a company director and his disqualification from managing limited companies for a significant amount of time is justified in the public interest.
Nix told Reuters he hadnât admitted any wrongdoing nor been accused of breaking the law, but had accepted the disqualification to âavoid an unnecessary, lengthy and expensive court caseâ.
[Read: Are EVs too expensive? Here are 5 common myths, debunked]
SCL Elections and the five connected companies ceased trading in 2018 after the Cambridge Analytica scandal drove away their clients.
The political consultancy had harvested data from up to 87 million Facebook users, which was used to target US voters with personalized ads that helped Donald Trumpâs 2016 presidential campaign.
Nix was later caught on camera saying the firm could use sex workers, bribes, ex-spies, and fake IDs to assist election campaigns around the world.
âSend some girls around to the candidateâs house,â Nix said in one exchange, adding that Ukrainian women âare very beautiful, I find that works very well.â
The Insolvency Service didnât reveal whether the companies had ever performed any of these services when announcing Nixâs ban, which comes into effect on October 5. Weâll be keeping an eye out for his next move.
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