HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_030359.jpg
878 KB
Extraction Summary
3
People
3
Organizations
0
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
2
Quotes
Document Information
Type:
News article snippet / report
File Size:
878 KB
Summary
This document describes an incident where Jes Staley, the CEO of Barclays, received a prank email on a Wednesday evening after a contentious shareholders' meeting. The email, which Staley believed was from his chairman John McFarlane, had the subject line “The fool doth think he is wise” and was actually sent by a prankster using a Gmail account to impersonate McFarlane.
People (3)
| Name | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Jes Staley | Chief Executive |
The embattled chief executive of Barclays who received a prank email.
|
| John McFarlane | Chairman |
Chairman of Barclays. A prankster impersonated him in an email to Jes Staley.
|
| Michael Mason-Mahon | Individual Shareholder |
A shareholder who called for Jes Staley to resign at the annual meeting. He was described in the prank email.
|
Organizations (3)
| Name | Type | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Barclays |
The company where Jes Staley is CEO and John McFarlane is Chairman.
|
|
| Gmail |
The email service used by the prankster.
|
|
| HOUSE_OVERSIGHT |
Implied from the document identifier at the bottom of the page.
|
Timeline (2 events)
Wednesday
A 'bruising' Barclays shareholders’ annual meeting where shareholder Michael Mason-Mahon called for CEO Jes Staley to resign.
Unknown
Wednesday evening
Jes Staley received a prank email purporting to be from his chairman, John McFarlane, following the shareholders' meeting.
Unknown
Jes Staley
Prankster
Relationships (2)
Staley is the chief executive and McFarlane is the chairman of Barclays.
Mason-Mahon, a shareholder, called for Staley's resignation at an annual meeting.
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