Imperial Valley Press

Cambridge Analytica: We designed Trump campaign strategy

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LONDON (AP) — The chief executive of data mining firm Cambridge Analytica told a reporter posing as a potential client that his company played a big role in getting Donald Trump elected, a British news program revealed Tuesday.

“We did all the research, all the data, all the analytics, all the targeting. We ran all the digital campaign, the television campaign and our data informed all the strategy,” Nix said during a secretly recorded meeting with the undercover Channel 4 News reporter.

The broadcaste­r aired the comments as Cambridge Analytica’s board of directors announced Nix’s immediate suspension pending an independen­t investigat­ion.

The board cited recent allegation­s by a former employee that the firm improperly used informatio­n from more than 50 million Facebook accounts to help Trump , as well as unguarded comments Nix made during his meeting with the journalist he thought was a client.

British officials are investigat­ing Cambridge Analytica for its handling of personal data.

The company has denied wrongdoing.

The Channel 4 reporter posed as a wealthy potential client interested in hiring Cambridge Analytica to influence campaigns in Sri Lanka.

Nix claimed to have met Trump “many times,” but did not provide details.

As part of a sales pitch, Nix said the firm sent emails with a “self-destruct timer” during the Trump campaign to make its role more difficult to trace.

“So you send them and after they’ve been read, two hours later, they disappear,” the broadcaste­r recorded him saying.

“There’s no evidence, there’s no paper trail, there’s nothing.”

He also said U.S. officials would not investigat­e his foreign clients because “they have no jurisdicti­on.”

In another segment from its undercover investigat­ion broadcast Monday, Channel 4 News showed Nix suggesting the company could tarnish political rivals by offering them large amounts of money or tempting them into compromisi­ng sexual situations.

He suggested incriminat­ing videos could be posted on the internet.

He responded by saying he was the victim of media harassment and has denied misleading British authoritie­s or inappropri­ate informatio­n.

Channel 4 also quoted Mark Turnbull, another senior figure at Cambridge Analytica, as saying the company could create “proxy organizati­ons” to feed negative material about opposition candidates onto the internet and social media.

Turnball said “charities or activist groups” were useful for such a purpose.

The unflatteri­ng material could be spread through the internet, but without branding or other identifier­s that could be traced back Cambridge Analytica.

The company said it has complied with all regulation­s and is cooperatin­g with British informatio­n officials.

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