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Crispin Odey: I can’t remember telling female employee ‘I could attack you now’

about 17 hours ago
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Facing a litany of questions over sexual harassment allegations that have left his career in tatters, the hedge fund tycoon Crispin Odey has told a court he does not remember cornering a female employee after a boozy lunch and saying to her “I could attack you now”.The 67-year-old made the comments during his first day in the witness box as part of a three-week court case that Odey hopes will overturn the City regulator’s decision to ban him from the UK’s financial services industry.Odey, who appeared in the London courtroom wearing a pink tie and braces, said that while he remembered the employee as an “attractive girl”, he did not recall the alleged incident, which lawyers for the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) said had been recorded in the employee’s diary.The entry referring to Odey, dated 24 January 2020, said: “Comes back from boozy lunch and corners me in the corridor.Him: I could attack you now.

Me: Please don’t,Him: You could sue me for that,”Asked for his response to the diary entry, Odey said he did not remember it, saying only that the employee “was an attractive girl … she kept a diary which I didn’t know about”,He said: “Given that someone keeps a diary, I anticipate they are writing what they said, but when I read these things it’s no surprise I don’t remember them,They were words.

”He admitted to the court to having groped a colleague’s breasts without her consent in 2005, which he blamed on having been under sedatives after root canal treatment.He said the woman accepted his apology and continued to work for the firm for another eight years.The Brexit-backing hedge fund chief, who resigned in 2023, is trying to overturn the regulator’s decision to ban him from taking any senior roles in the UK financial sector.The FCA claimed he showed a “lack of integrity” by deliberately attempting to frustrate an investigation by his own hedge fund into allegations of sexual harassment, which he denies.Odey said in his witness statement that he had not tried to prevent an investigation but that he had attempted to have the FCA rule on whether he was fit and proper first.

“I could not contemplate a hastily convened disciplinary process being undertaken internally that could see me leaving the firm, before the authority had completed its investigation and decided on my conduct over a 20-year period,” he said.He claimed he had been treated unfairly by the FCA.“Both my relationship and the firm’s relationship with the authority changed when in May 2020 I was charged in connection with a sexual assault allegation dating back to 1999.I can now see that the case was taken up by the authority as something of a cause célèbre because at the time they were seeking to assert their reach over non-financial misconduct.I became, I fear, a poster boy for the authority’s agenda.

”The FCA claims Odey is not a fit and proper person to run a financial services company, having shown a “reckless disregard” for compliance and having treated internal disciplinary processes with “contempt”.Odey has since launched a £79m libel lawsuit against the Financial Times, saying he suffered “very significant financial loss” because of articles alleging he had sexually assaulted or harassed multiple women.The allegations, which emerged in the media in summer 2023, eventually led to him being removed from OAM, which announced plans to close in October that year.The FCA’s lawyer Clare Sibson pushed Odey on a number of other harassment allegations, including those filed by a receptionist in her mid-20s.Odey had invited the receptionist to a shooting weekend in Bristol in 2020, which she eventually declined, recalling to investigators that she knew “what was expected of me”.

The receptionist was later fired from the firm without a bonus, which Odey said he was not involved in and that he believed was unfair.Odey told the court during an at-times testy cross-examination that he believed his relationship with the unnamed receptionist was “consensual”, and he alleged she was a “flirt” who left other members of staff jealous of her interaction with him.He said he had probably been swept up in “an old man’s dream” that a woman in her 20s would be interested in a man in his 60s, but later realised she was “dangerous”.“The way she flirted with me was inappropriate, on both sides,” Odey said.He conceded that over time his flirtations with young women in the office may have made him seem like a “creepy old man”.

In his witness statement, Odey admitted to having been “something of a dinosaur” who had not “adapted to the modern working environment”.He said an internal investigation had made it clear “that I had got things wrong”.“It was not right that members of staff felt uncomfortable because of my behaviour,” he added in the statement.Odey is also facing civil personal injury claims by five women, including one who accused him of rape, which he also denies.Those cases are scheduled to be heard together in joint proceedings in June.

The hearing continues.
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UK inflation steady before Iran war; oil price dips on Trump comments – business live

Rachel Reeves, the UK chancellor, has responded to the inflation figures.double quotation markIn an uncertain world we have the right economic plan, taking a responsive and responsible approach to supporting working people in the national interest.We’re taking £150 off energy bills [from measures in November’s budget] and providing targeted support for those facing higher heating oil costs. We’re also acting to protect people from unfair price rises if they occur, bring down food prices at the till, and cut red tape to boost long-term energy security — building a stronger, more secure economy.On Tuesday, she ruled out universal support to deal with any future rise in energy bills, saying any government help would be targeted, and criticised the support offered by Liz Truss’s government as unaffordable and irresponsible

about 2 hours ago
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UK inflation held at 3% before global energy price hit from Iran war

The UK inflation rate held steady at 3% in February, before Donald Trump’s Iran war drove up global energy costs, threatening a renewed price jump.Official figures showed the consumer prices index remained at the same level as the previous month, in line with economists’ expectations but still well above the government’s 2% target.The annual rate of food inflation fell slightly, driven by drops in olive oil, flour and pizza, but the Food and Drink Federation warned this was likely to be “the calm before the storm”.The outlook for inflation has shifted dramatically since the onset of the Middle East conflict, which has sent oil and gas prices soaring after the effective closure of the strait of Hormuz, an important shipping route.As recently as last month, the Bank of England was forecasting CPI inflation to fall to the 2% target in the second quarter of the year, opening the way to more interest rate cuts

about 3 hours ago
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Meta ordered to pay $375m after being found liable in child exploitation case

A New Mexico jury on Tuesday ordered Meta to pay $375m in civil penalties after it found the company misled consumers about the safety of its platforms and enabled harm, including child sexual exploitation, against its users.This is the first bench trial to find Meta liable for acts committed on its platform.“The jury’s verdict is a historic victory for every child and family who has paid the price for Meta’s choice to put profits over kids’ safety,” said New Mexico attorney general Raúl Torrez.“Meta executives knew their products harmed children, disregarded warnings from their own employees, and lied to the public about what they knew. Today the jury joined families, educators, and child safety experts in saying enough is enough

about 10 hours ago
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OpenAI shutters AI video generator Sora in abrupt announcement

In an abrupt announcement on Tuesday, OpenAI said it was “saying goodbye” to its AI video generator Sora. The move comes just six months after the company’s splashy launch of a stand-alone app where people could make and share hyper-realistic AI videos in a scrolling social feed.“To everyone who created with Sora, shared it, and built community around it: thank you,” the company wrote in a post on X. “What you made with Sora mattered, and we know this news is disappointing.”OpenAI first made Sora publicly available in late 2024, but it wasn’t until the company launched Sora 2 and its stand-alone app last September that the video generator reached mainstream attention

about 11 hours ago
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Radical swim training approach pays off for Cameron McEvoy with ‘really special’ record

Cameron McEvoy knew he was fast, but he surprised both himself and the world of elite swimming when he hit the wall at the end of the 50m freestyle at the China Open on Friday. The clock read 20.88sec, securing the Australian a lifelong goal.The Queenslander had broken a longstanding world record, set in the era of now-banned super-suits, by three hundredths of a second.“That was more of a target for the end of this season, so to have hit it at the moment in March is really special,” he said on his return to Brisbane on Wednesday

about 3 hours ago
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Coco Gauff battles impostor syndrome on way into Miami Open semi-finals

Coco Gauff may be struggling with an unfamiliar arm injury, indifferent form and the pressure of attempting to transform her serve with the entire tennis world watching, but the one quality that will never evade her is her fighting spirit.Under far from ideal circumstances, Gauff’s mental toughness continues to guide her through the Miami Open draw and to her best ever result at her hometown tournament. She navigated a path into the semi-finals for the first time in her career with an arduous 6-3, 1-6, 6-3 win over Bencic.Although Gauff has not always been able to consistently produce her best level this year in Miami, and she has been taken to a final set in all four of her matches so far, she continues to find a way through.“I think it just shows my mind and it’s just all about mentality out there at the end of the day,” said Gauff

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