Business Day

Putting a bug in the Ritz and airing the Barclay family’s dirty laundry

• Legal dispute gives a glimpse of divisions in one of UK’s richest clans

- Ellen Milligan, Jonathan Browning and Benjamin Stupples London The Twin Enigma,

The secretive world of British billionair­e twins Frederick and David Barclay started to unravel with a hidden camera and a discreet taping system.

In a video released by Frederick this week, one of David’s sons, Alistair Barclay, is allegedly shown hiding a listening device in the conservato­ry of the Ritz Hotel to capture private discussion­s between Frederick and his daughter, Amanda, who were negotiatin­g the sale of the historic hotel near Buckingham Palace.

But Frederick was worried that someone had been listening to their conversati­ons, and got hotel security to install a hidden camera that captured the footage.

The brothers, who spent decades avoiding media attention by isolating themselves on an island in the middle of the English Channel, are now front-page news due to the latest part of the family’s multigener­ational legal dispute over the sale of the Ritz.

FREEZING OUT

They handed the family business to the next generation, but Frederick’s lawyers told a London court that David’s three sons are freezing out his daughter, Amanda.

The case offers a glimpse of the divisions in one of the UK’s richest clans, which owns the Daily Telegraph newspaper and other businesses at the heart of the UK establishm­ent.

“Unfortunat­ely this is a classic example of how family enterprise­s self-destruct,” said Irina Curbelo, co-founder of family business consulting firm Percheron Advisory.

“The Barclays need to remember that 60% of familybusi­ness failure is because of a lack of open communicat­ion and trust. Without rebuilding this, all their businesses, a large part of the family wealth, and the family bonds themselves, will be gone,” Curbelo said.

Hefin Rees, Frederick and Amanda’s lawyer, told a London court at a preliminar­y hearing earlier this month that the factions’ interests were already “in conflict’’.

By listening in, the cousins were able to anticipate Frederick and Amanda’s “every move in advance, plan their business strategy around that” including legal advice they were getting “at this crucial time when their business and personal relationsh­ips had broken down’’, the attorney said.

“He is a man who is now left to contemplat­e his nephews’ betrayal and a father who has witnessed the prejudicia­l treatment of his daughter by her cousins,” Rees told the court, arguing “this was commercial espionage on a vast scale”.

While the case has been wending its way through the London courts since Frederick and Amanda sued David’s sons, Alistair, Aidan and Howard, and Aidan’s son Andrew in January, the CCTV footage has given it a new prominence.

Alistair, casual in his Harvard sweatshirt, is seen allegedly searching for a place for an electric plug adapter, which is said to hold the bug.

He leans down and allegedly plugs it in next to a creamcolou­red chair where Frederick would frequently sit to smoke a cigar while talking business with Amanda, who would take her place on the flower-print sofa. Alistair appears to look directly at the camera before walking over to touch it.

The device captured 94 hours of audio recordings and 1,000 separate conversati­ons over several months, including Frederick and Amanda’s private conversati­ons with their lawyers, trustees, bankers and businesspe­ople, as well as negotiatio­ns with prospectiv­e buyers of the Ritz, the pair’s lawyers said in court filings.

ALREADY DIVIDED

The family was already divided over the sale of the five-star hotel, which the identical twins bought for £75m in 1995.

When Alistair allegedly planted the device in January, the two sides were conducting separate negotiatio­ns. Because of the recordings, the cousins were able to learn that Saudi Arabia-based Sidra Capital had made an initial offer of £1.3bn to Frederick and Amanda, as well as an unnamed acquisitio­n being discussed between Frederick, Amanda and a Russian businessma­n, the pair’s lawyers said.

The cousins’ lawyer, Heather Rogers, said that they accepted that Frederick and Amanda were recorded without their knowledge or consent and that some of the recordings’ transcript­s were shared between the cousins, who have not filed a defence.

She criticised Frederick and Amanda’s written submission­s for being purposeful­ly “eyecatchin­g and emotive” and using “heavy spin”.

“This is a dispute about family members and from the defendants’ point of view it is unfortunat­e that they are being canvassed in public rather than resolved in the family,” she said at the remote court hearing earlier this month. A spokespers­on for Frederick and Amanda declined to comment beyond their earlier statements.

A spokespers­on for Ellerman Holdings, the holding company for the Barclays’ UK assets led by Aidan and Howard Barclay, also declined to comment.

This month’s court hearing also revealed that David’s sons hired Quest Global, a private investigat­ion firm with offices in

London and Qatar, which supplied a separate bug, Rees, Frederick’s attorney, said in written submission­s. Quest charged for 405 hours for listening and transcribi­ng the recordings, which were then shared with the cousins, Rees told the court.

Quest, chaired and at least partially owned by the former London police chief John Stevens, is most well known for its work on sports investigat­ions. It operates from an address just across the park from the Ritz, and boasts of its extensive experience in surveillan­ce and long-term monitoring of staff and buildings. A representa­tive for Quest declined to comment.

In court, Rees said the recordings captured extensive discussion­s between Frederick,

Amanda and a mystery Russian businessma­n relating to an unnamed acquisitio­n that did not go through after the cousins’ attorneys intervened. He said Quest delivered a report into the Russian businessma­n in November last year, apparently prepared for Ellerman Holdings.

The 85-year-old twins are among Britain’s most discreet billionair­es, known for a family compound on a tiny island off the UK’s southern coast.

Born to Scottish parents — just 10 minutes apart — they grew up in a west London household so close to a railroad that trains would rattle the windows. After leaving school at 16, the twins joined the accounts department of General Electric, according to

a 2016 book by Vivienne Lewin.

They teamed up in the 1960s to turn old boarding houses into hotels and moved into breweries and casinos, marking the beginning of their business empire. Their holdings include delivery service Yodel and online retailer The Very Group.

Frederick is also in court with his estranged wife, Hiroko Barclay. A judge who oversaw the divorce’s preliminar­y hearing placed limits on what can be reported, but the case may eventually shed light on the Barclay family’s finances if it reaches a public decision.

Public filings show hints of the Barclay family’s fallout even before start of the court case, and how the Ritz’s new owner snapped up one of the Barclays’s most valuable assets.

Aidan and Howard Barclay replaced Amanda and one of her associates as directors across the Ritz companies a week after Alistair Barclay was recorded handling the bug.

The brothers secured a deal with Qatari businessma­n Abdulhadi Mana Al-Hajri for the Ritz for about £800m in March, with Frederick and Amanda finding out through press reports, despite Amanda holding a 25% stake in the hotel.

THE BARCLAYS NEED TO REMEMBER 60% OF FAMILY-BUSINESS FAILURE IS BECAUSE OF A LACK OF OPEN COMMUNICAT­ION AND TRUST

PERTURBED

“We are surprised and perturbed by the announceme­nt that the Ritz hotel has allegedly been sold,” a spokespers­on for Frederick said at the time. “We have neither consulted nor have we approved this sale.”

Al-Hajri, the brother-in-law of Qatar’s ruler, is following the style of the Barclays’ stewardshi­p of the Ritz by keeping a low profile. In addition to the London hotel, his real estate holdings include Turkey’s most expensive home and a $50m Miami mansion, according to local media.

Another of Frederick and Amanda’s lawyers, Desmond Browne, summarised the family feud in court earlier this year.

“We all remember Tolstoy saying ‘each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way’. Here, the children of Sir Frederick and Sir David have been at odds ... concerning the family trusts, and cousin, sadly, has been pitched against cousin.”

THE CHILDREN HAVE BEEN AT ODDS ... CONCERNING THE FAMILY TRUSTS, AND COUSIN, SADLY, HAS BEEN PITCHED AGAINST COUSIN

 ?? /AFP ?? Historic hotel:
The sale of the Ritz in central London is the centrepiec­e in the Barclays family feud after it was sold without the approval of some members of the family
/AFP Historic hotel: The sale of the Ritz in central London is the centrepiec­e in the Barclays family feud after it was sold without the approval of some members of the family

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa