Austin American-Statesman

Cambridge Analytica is not to be revived

‘It’s the end of the show,’ says firm’s founder Oakes.

- By Stephanie Baker

When the political consulting firm Cambridge Analytica announced last week it would be closing its doors and filing for bankruptcy in the wake of the Facebook data scandal, speculatio­n mounted that it would be revived under the guise of two new companies set up in London.

Not so, said Nigel Oakes, the founder of Cambridge Analytica’s British affiliate, SCL Group.

“It’s the end of the show,” he said by phone Tuesday. “The whole lot is gone. There’s no secret. For anything like this to re-create itself you need a team of people to work together, but nobody is working together. Everybody has gone off to do their own things.”

Several media outlets had pointed to filings on U.K. business registry Companies House showing Cambridge Analytica executives had set up a London-based firm in August 2017 called Emerdata Ltd.

Rebekah and Jennifer Mercer, the daughters of conservati­ve hedge fund tycoon and Trump supporter Robert Mercer, joined the board in March.

Oakes said the original idea was to acquire Cambridge Analytica and SCL and put them under one roof. Now Emerdata is also in administra­tion, he said.

Firecrest Technologi­es Ltd., another company created in March by former Cambridge Analytica Chief Executive Officer Alexander Nix, would also be wound down, he said.

Firecrest’s main shareholde­r was Emerdata, according to company filings. Nix declined to comment when reached by phone.

Both companies were set up before revelation­s from a whistle blower were released in March that Cambridge Analytica had misused data from millions of Facebook users that underpinne­d work on President Donald Trump’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign.

Oakes didn’t say what would happen to the company’s intellectu­al property or the voter profile data it had built.

“That’s the end of it,” Oakes said. “The whole group has been closed down. There’s no other organizati­on that’s been created.”

Cambridge Analytica announced last week that it was beginning bankruptcy proceeding­s, saying the media storm over its use of Facebook data had scared clients away.

The scandal worsened with the release of an undercover video showing Nix talking about the use of bribery to trap politician­s in foreign election campaigns.

The company then suspended Nix while it started an independen­t investigat­ion.

The results of that investigat­ion challenged some of the allegation­s made about how the firm acquired Facebook data, but the company concluded it still couldn’t continue.

“Over the past several months, Cambridge Analytica has been the subject of numerous unfounded accusation­s and, despite the company’s efforts to correct the record, has been vilified for activities that are not only legal, but also widely accepted as a standard component of online advertisin­g in both the political and commercial arenas,” the company said in a statement announcing insolvency proceeding­s.

 ?? STEPHEN CHUNG / TNS ?? The building that houses the offices of Cambridge Analytica in London. Cambridge Analytica announced last week that it was beginning bankruptcy proceeding­s, saying the media storm over its use of Facebook data had scared clients away.
STEPHEN CHUNG / TNS The building that houses the offices of Cambridge Analytica in London. Cambridge Analytica announced last week that it was beginning bankruptcy proceeding­s, saying the media storm over its use of Facebook data had scared clients away.

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