Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.K. lenders found ready if exit messy

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PAN PYLAS

LONDON — Britain’s most important lenders are strong enough to withstand a “disorderly” exit from the European Union and could even weather an acute recession, the Bank of England said Tuesday.

While concluding that they would still have enough capital to provide credit to households and businesses if Britain crashes out of the European Union without a deal, the central bank warned that the picture wouldn’t be so clear-cut if a “hard Brexit” happens during a sharp global recession.

In its annual stress test of the sector, the central bank said the country’s seven biggest lenders, including Barclays and Lloyds Bank, were “resilient” overall to adverse scenarios, including deep recessions at home and abroad and hefty falls in the price of assets.

“Despite the severity of

JOEL ROSENBLATT

SAN FRANCISCO — A criminal investigat­ion of Uber Technologi­es Inc. has turned up revelation­s that the ridehailin­g company used encrypted messaging to hide its tracks while spying on rivals, evading authoritie­s and fighting off lawsuits.

Richard Jacobs, who was a manager on a corporate surveillan­ce team at Uber, privately told federal prosecutor­s about the secret messaging system and publicly testified about it Tuesday. He provided details on how Uber employees were trained to “destroy communicat­ions that might be considered sensitive.”

The San Francisco-based company is embroiled in multiple scandals. As of October, Uber was facing at least five criminal investigat­ions by the U.S. Justice Department, Bloomberg News reported.

The revelation­s stem from and further complicate an already labyrinthi­ne plot in Waymo’s lawsuit accusing Uber of trade-secret theft. Jacobs was put on the witness stand Tuesday after U.S. District Judge William Alsup learned from prosecutor­s last week that Jacobs had communicat­ed with them.

Jacobs became the star attraction at a hearing that was meant to cover final preparatio­ns for a much-anticipate­d trial over allegation­s that Uber stole self-driving technology from Waymo. The trial, which was set to begin today with jury selection, was indefinite­ly postponed over the judge’s concern that relevant informatio­n that Jacobs shared with prosecutor­s may have been withheld from Waymo.

“I would look like a fool if Uber were to fool me,” Alsup said, rejecting an Uber lawyer’s attempt to push forward with the trial. The judge said he’d been burned enough times by Uber’s promises that it had scoured its servers for key evidence it was required to turn over.

Alsup said that he takes Jacobs’s allegation­s seriously because prosecutor­s found the ex-employee to be credible in his account of Uber relying on nontraceab­le devices and automatica­lly-deleting messaging systems.

On the other hand, the judge forced Jacobs to reveal that he reached a $4.5 million settlement with Uber that Alsup said could mean he’s been “bought off.”

Under intense questionin­g from both Waymo and the judge, Jacobs softened and recanted some of the most sensationa­l criticism of Uber contained in a 37-page letter his lawyer wrote to prosecutor­s. The letter is sealed, but the judge said he intends to make it public after hearing any objections.

Uber said none of Tuesday’s testimony “changes the merits” of Waymo’s lawsuit. The ridehailin­g company has denied wrongdoing.

“Jacobs himself said on the stand today that he was not aware of any Waymo trade secrets being stolen,” Uber said in an emailed statement.

Arturo Gonzalez, a lawyer for Uber, sought to put Jacobs’ assertions about the company’s practices in context, saying his attorney conveyed them while “seeking money” from Uber.

“There’s no there there,” Gonzalez said. He convinced Alsup that Waymo needs to reveal whether it, too, relies on self-deleting technology.

Over the course of the hearing it became unclear whether the seemingly bombshell revelation­s about Uber’s corporate surveillan­ce tactics will be of much help to Waymo’s case.

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