Categories: Finances

Staley fights back after Barclays chair says his view has ‘changed’ in Epstein case

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The former Barclays chief Jes Staley came out fighting in his battle with UK authorities over his ties to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, after the bank’s chair told a London court that his view of the pair’s relationship had changed.

In statements published on Monday, Staley, 68, accused regulators of “destroying” his reputation as he sought to overturn the ban and fine that the Financial Conduct Authority had imposed on him for allowing Barclays to mislead the regulator about the nature of his dealings with Epstein.

The case centres on two statements Barclays made in a letter in 2019 — which Staley approved — that the chief executive “did not have a close relationship” with Epstein and that his last contact with him was “well before” he had joined the UK bank in 2015.

The FCA, which imposed its ban in 2023, contends that a cache of emails between the two show that the statements in Barclays’ letter were inaccurate.

Staley said: “The FCA took the most serious and drastic step that it could, ending my long and distinguished career in financial services and destroying my reputation without first asking me for an explanation for any perceived discrepancy” between the letter and the emails.

“It has become clear to me . . . that the [Prudential Regulation Authority] and the FCA prejudged the investigation,” he said. “I consider that the FCA’s case against me lacks objectivity and does not bear logical scrutiny.”

Staley took to the witness stand on Monday shortly after Barclays’ chair, Nigel Higgins, who told the court that the bank would have questioned Staley more thoroughly about his relationship with Epstein if it knew then what it knows now.

In his witness statement, Higgins said that during Staley’s time at Barclays: “I had understood that the relationship between him and Mr Epstein was essentially business related.”

However, he added: “The information of which I am now aware paints a different picture in my mind as to the nature of the relationship.”

“Had my colleagues at Barclays and I been aware of all of the information of which I am now aware, I am sure that we would have questioned Mr Staley about that further information in depth.

“At this distance, and without the benefit of discussing this information with Mr Staley and other colleagues, I cannot be certain what we would have concluded.”

In a 2021 interview with regulators, Higgins had explained “affectionate” messages Staley sent to Epstein as being “the way he writes” to “lots of people”, the court heard on Monday.

Staley, in his witness statement, defended his business ties with Epstein, pointing to his connections with a long list of influential figures including Bill Clinton, Leon Black and Lawrence Summers and describing him as a “valuable” contact to cultivate.

But he insisted it was a “professional relationship” that “was predicated upon business”, disputing the FCA’s characterisation of their connection as “close”.

“We were not personal friends,” he said in his witness statement.

Staley said that as far as he could recall, his last meeting with Epstein was in April 2015, when he and his wife visited Epstein’s island for a few hours during a sailing holiday. The phrase in the letter “well before” referred to this, he said.

Staley said his last email exchange was on 25 October 2015, and that his last phone call was a few days later, when he told Epstein that there would be no further communication.

While the FCA has argued that contact continued thereafter via his daughter, Staley said does not accept that this constituted contact. He said he has “no recollection of having had any discussion with my daughter concerning this correspondence”.

Staley argues that it was flawed for the authority simply to compare the content of the emails between the two with Barclays’ letter to the FCA, whose real purpose was not to provide an all-encompassing account of the pair’s relationship but simply to assure the FCA that neither Staley nor Barclays knew of or were involved in Epstein’s criminal conduct.

“I have never attempted to conceal my relationship with Jeffrey Epstein,” Staley added. “If I had known it was to be found that he was a prolific sex offender, I would not have had a relationship with him at all.”

The case continues.

Source link

nasdaqpicks.com

Share
Published by
nasdaqpicks.com

Recent Posts

Delta warns on profit as economic ‘uncertainty’ dents US demand

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories…

10 minutes ago

Elon Musk blowback lights a rocket under European space companies

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories…

26 minutes ago

Elon Musk claims cyber attack on social network X came from ‘Ukraine area’

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for freeYour guide to what the 2024 US election…

42 minutes ago

Investors drag Wall Street down over tariff fears

This article is an on-site version of our FirstFT newsletter. Subscribers can sign up to…

58 minutes ago

NHS England looks to slash central staffing by half

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories…

1 hour ago

Keir Starmer calls for ‘positive’ US-Ukraine talks in call with Donald Trump

Unlock the White House Watch newsletter for freeYour guide to what the 2024 US election…

1 hour ago