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Jennifer Arcuri
Jennifer Arcuri
from Wikipedia

Jennifer Marie Arcuri (born February 1985)[1] is an American technology entrepreneur. She lived in London from 2011 to 2018, before moving back to California. Self-described as an "ethical hacker",[2] she founded the white hat consultancy Hacker House in 2016[3][4] and organized the Innotech Network from 2012. Her connection to then Mayor of London Boris Johnson from 2012 came to national attention in the UK in September 2019 when he became Prime Minister, triggering investigations into alleged conflicts of interest.[5] She said in 2021 that she had an affair with him from 2012 to 2016.[6]

Key Information

Career

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Arcuri previously lived in California and New York.[7] She studied politics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, theatre at Pace University in New York, filmmaking at the University of Southern California, and film at the American University in Paris for a summer. She briefly modeled and acted, including in a short film titled Commute.[5] In California, she worked in film, including digital distribution, and production, sending a short film titled La Valise to Cannes.[8] Arcuri owned a video streaming site for filmmakers, Ubroadcast, until selling it to Diamond I in 2009.[8][9]

Technology

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In 2008, Arcuri first visited London to take part in a Bollywood film, Naughty @ 40.[7][5] She moved to London in early 2011. Arcuri studied for an MBA at Hult International Business School, where she met Tom Hayes and founded software company Title X Technology with him in 2012, using developers in Bulgaria.[10] She defended Hayes in the Wall Street Journal after he came under investigation for the Libor scandal in 2013, for which he was later sentenced to 14 years in jail.[11]

From 2012, Arcuri organized the Innotech Summit in London.[7] She founded the Tech Hotel in Shoreditch[7] and was involved with Founders for Schools. She also founded Playbox, a video social network for entrepreneurs.[7] She received an entrepreneur's visa after three years in the UK,[7] after raising over £200,000 in funding for Innotech.[12] By 2016, Innotech Network was noted as a meeting place for the tech industry and policymakers such as Boris Johnson.[13]

In November 2016, she worked with Sky News on a report that showed that the UK NHS had spent nothing on cyber-security during 2015; she noted that security was generally lacking in NHS trusts.[14][15]

In 2016, she headed the Tech London Advocates working group on cyber tech.[16] She also founded Hacker House in 2016, a consultancy that advises and trains on cybersecurity,[3] coming out of a "Legislating LulzSec" event run by Innotech in October 2014.[17] Hacker House received a grant from the UK Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Cyber Skills Immediate Impact Fund in 2019, sharing £500,000 with three other projects.[18][19]

Arcuri has encouraged other women and girls to become involved in the sector and ran the PinkSheet, a list of UK women expert professionals.[20][4]

Recognition

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Arcuri was recognized several times by Computer Weekly: in 2016, she was named as one of five "rising stars" among women in UK IT;[21] she was named 18th of 50 of the "most influential women in UK tech" in 2017;[22] she was longlisted for the same award in 2018 and 2019.[23][24]

SC Magazine listed Arcuri among twenty "women to watch" in UK cybersecurity in 2017.[4]

Relationship to Boris Johnson

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Arcuri had a close friendship with then-Mayor of London Boris Johnson,[25] with the Sunday Times describing him as a regular visitor to her flat,[26] and implying they were in a sexual relationship.[27] Innotech, her company, was awarded £10,000 from a mayoral fund in 2013, followed the next year by Arcuri being awarded £15,000 from a government programme. Johnson intervened to allow her onto three trade mission trips.[28] the Sunday Times claimed in September 2019 that Johnson failed to declare his personal relationship as a conflict of interest.[29]

Later that month, the Greater London Authority referred Johnson and his actions in the matter to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) "so it can assess whether or not it is necessary to investigate the former mayor of London for the criminal offence of misconduct in public office". The IOPC is involved because the Mayor is also London's police and crime commissioner.[30] The London Assembly commenced its own investigation, but paused it at the IOPC's request in order to avoid overlap. On 9 November 2019, it was revealed that the IOPC, which had been due to publish a report on its investigation, had decided to do so after the general election of 12 December.[31]

On 22 May 2020, the IOPC announced that they would not proceed with a criminal investigation. The IOPC said in its statement "While there was no evidence that Mr Johnson influenced the payment of sponsorship monies or participation in trade missions, there was evidence to suggest that those officers making decisions about sponsorship monies and attendance on trade missions thought that there was a close relationship between Mr Johnson and Ms Arcuri, and this influenced their decision-making."[32]

On 17 October 2020, Arcuri said that her relationship with Johnson had been sexual.[33] On 28 March 2021, she said their affair lasted from 2012 to 2016.[6]

Promotion of conspiracy theories

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In December 2021, Vice News reported that Arcuri was promoting QAnon and anti-vaccine conspiracy theories on her Twitter account and Telegram channel.[34]

Personal life

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Arcuri's grandfather was lawyer Richard Cates. His daughter Christine Jendrzejewski is Arcuri's mother.[35] Arcuri is married to Matthew Hickey, the co-director of Hacker House, with whom she had a daughter in 2017. They moved to Orange County, California in June 2018.[36][5] According to Andrew Neil, who is suing Arcuri for libel, since January 2021, Arcuri has lived in Panama City, Florida.[37]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Jennifer Arcuri (born 1985) is an American entrepreneur and cybersecurity expert based in , recognized for founding tech-focused organizations such as Hacker House Ltd. and the Innotech Network.
Early in her career, Arcuri worked as a DJ on , produced the La Valise sold at , and launched Playbox Ltd., a for independent filmmakers. Relocating to the in 2011, she pursued an MBA at and obtained cybersecurity certifications including CEH, CISSP, and . In 2015, she established Cyber TLA and the PinkSheet Database to promote women in tech, followed by Hacker House in 2016, which specializes in ethical hacking and cyber training solutions for businesses.
Arcuri's prominence increased due to her professional ties with during his tenure as (2008–2016), during which her companies received approximately £126,000 in public funding, including £10,000 from a mayoral fund and £15,000 via the Sirius programme. Additional scrutiny arose from a £100,000 grant to Hacker House from the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy in 2019, later deemed appropriate by government review with no evidence of . Allegations of a personal affair with Johnson, which she reportedly acknowledged, prompted investigations but resulted in no criminal proceedings.

Early Life and Background

Education and Formative Experiences

Jennifer Arcuri was born in February 1985 in . Details of her family background and specific early influences remain limited in public records, with no documented parental or familial roles in shaping her interests in technology or business. In 2001, Arcuri obtained a law certificate from in New York, alongside studies in theatre and politics at the institution. She also pursued education at the until 2010 and holds additional degrees, including in . Her early professional exposure included work as a at , providing initial experience in media and entertainment. Arcuri's formative entrepreneurial activities in centered on the film and digital sectors, where she founded UB Film, a digital studio linking independent filmmakers to audiences, in December 2007. In 2008, she produced the short film La Valise, which was submitted to the , highlighting her hands-on engagement with digital distribution and production technologies. These endeavors laid empirical groundwork for her subsequent focus on tech innovation by demonstrating practical applications of digital tools in and dissemination. In 2011, Arcuri relocated to as a key transitional step, motivated by ambitions to expand her technology and business pursuits through advanced studies, including enrollment in an MBA program at . This move aligned with her prior experiences in , positioning her to leverage international opportunities in entrepreneurship.

Professional Career

Technology Ventures and Entrepreneurship

Jennifer Arcuri relocated to in 2011 and established herself in the city's burgeoning technology sector. In 2012, she founded Innotech Network, a platform dedicated to organizing events, networking opportunities, and startup funding initiatives aimed at developing technology clusters. The company hosted annual summits that connected entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers, contributing to the growth of 's Tech City ecosystem through discussions on tech policy and innovation. These events, running from 2012 to 2016, emphasized practical applications in and helped stimulate the local startup scene amid competitive market conditions. In 2015, Arcuri launched Cyber TLA under Tech London Advocates, focusing on cybersecurity awareness and positioning herself as a to promote skills development in the field. This initiative addressed gaps in cyber training by fostering community networks for professionals. The following year, in 2016, she established Hacker House, a white-hat consultancy providing solutions, training programs, and advisory services to the industry. Hacker House offered hands-on courses in ethical hacking, incorporating practical tools such as drones, radio frequencies, and lock-picking to simulate real-world cyber threats and defenses. The firm expanded to secure facilities in , , and outside , serving clients seeking to enhance cyber skills amid rising demand for specialized expertise. Arcuri's ventures emphasized self-reliant growth in a challenging environment characterized by limited funding and high competition in London's startup landscape. Innotech Network and Hacker House operated with lean teams, prioritizing innovative training methodologies over large-scale capital investments, and engaged a range of participants from startups to established firms in the tech ecosystem. By 2018, these efforts had positioned her companies as contributors to cybersecurity education and tech networking, with Hacker House championing proactive measures against evolving digital risks.

Infotech Summit and Public Speaking

In 2013, Jennifer Arcuri launched the Innotech Network, a series of events including the Innotech Summit, aimed at fostering discussions among entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers on technology policy and innovation. The inaugural summit occurred on April 26, 2013, at Level 39 in Canary Wharf, London, featuring panels on emerging tech trends and networking opportunities to advance digital skills development. Subsequent events expanded outreach, with Arcuri organizing international sessions to highlight cybersecurity challenges and ethical hacking's role in economic resilience. These summits emphasized practical outcomes, such as policy recommendations for enhancing tech education and innovation ecosystems, drawing speakers from London's tech sector to address skill gaps in areas like . Arcuri's efforts positioned the events as hubs for cross-sector collaboration, promoting actionable insights into digital policy without direct governmental involvement. Arcuri extended her through , delivering TEDx talks that underscored her expertise in cybersecurity and digital . In , she spoke at TEDxLiverpool on the importance of ethical hacking in modern economies, arguing for its integration into to counter cyber threats. Additional addresses at TEDxUniversity of Manchester and TEDxManchester focused on rallying support for cyber skills amid cognitive and operational challenges in tech adoption, framing these as essential for societal adaptation to digital disruptions. These engagements established her as a proponent of proactive tech , emphasizing empirical needs for skill-building over theoretical discourse.

Achievements and Recognition

Jennifer Arcuri earned recognition for her work in cybersecurity and through industry accolades in the mid-2010s. In 2016, Computer Weekly named her a rising star among the most influential women in IT for founding Hacker House, an expert community focused on cybersecurity training, and the InnoTech Network, a platform for tech policy discussions. The following year, 2017, she was listed at position 18 in Computer Weekly's 50 Most Influential Women in UK Tech, highlighting her role in bridging entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers via InnoTech events. Also in 2017, SC Magazine UK selected her as one of 20 women to watch in UK cybersecurity, acknowledging her contributions as a and founder of initiatives like Cyber TLA. Arcuri's InnoTech Network, launched in 2012, organized summits that stimulated London's burgeoning tech scene by fostering dialogue on and , aligning with the city's growth as a European tech hub during the . Hacker House advanced practical cybersecurity , participants in ethical hacking techniques and establishing secure facilities in locations such as and outside by 2016. In 2019, Cyber Defense Magazine included her in its Top 25 Women in Cybersecurity, recognizing her leadership at Hacker House. These efforts underscored her influence in promoting specialized skills amid rising demand for cybersecurity expertise in the UK.

Association with Boris Johnson

Professional Collaboration During Mayoralty

Jennifer Arcuri established the Innotech Network in 2012, organizing tech-focused summits and events in to facilitate discussions among entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers on and the local startup ecosystem. These gatherings intersected with 's mayoral priorities, as he sought to elevate as a global technology hub through initiatives like Tech City, which targeted the area around —colloquially termed Silicon Roundabout—for fostering digital enterprises. Johnson participated directly in multiple Innotech events during his tenure, delivering addresses that highlighted 's tech ambitions. On 13 April 2012, he spoke at the inaugural Innotech Summit held at the Grand Connaught Rooms, emphasizing support for tech ventures. He returned for the second summit on 26 April 2013 at Level 39 in , where he provided a and joined a Hangout session on technology trends. Johnson also appeared briefly at the third summit on 14 October 2014 at the BAFTA buildings, offering remarks aligned with ongoing efforts to build tech infrastructure. These engagements reflected shared professional interests in bolstering London's position against rivals like , with Arcuri positioning her events as platforms for policy dialogue on regulatory hurdles and investment for startups. According to Arcuri's account, early interactions with Johnson at tech gatherings involved exchanges on the practical challenges of establishing companies in the city, during which he promoted existing mayoral programs. While no formal advisory appointment is documented, Arcuri described informally briefing Johnson on technical subjects, filling a perceived gap in his team's expertise amid the push for innovation districts.

Claims of Personal Relationship

In March 2021, Jennifer Arcuri stated in an interview with the that she had engaged in a four-year intimate sexual relationship with , beginning in late 2011 or early 2012 while he served as and continuing until approximately 2016. She described the affair as passionate, involving emotional attachment where she "fell in love" with Johnson, and claimed to have used codenames—such as "" for him—in private communications to maintain secrecy. Arcuri further asserted that Johnson's aides were aware of his "crush" on her during his mayoralty, though she maintained no professional impropriety stemmed directly from the personal dynamics. Arcuri's claims were supported by contemporaneous diary entries she shared with journalist John Ware in 2019, which documented personal interactions and her perceptions of Johnson's affections, including references to and secretive meetings. She had previously confided details of a sexual affair to friends during the period, as reported in investigative accounts, though these remain anecdotal without independent corroboration beyond her statements. Boris Johnson has consistently denied any romantic or sexual involvement with Arcuri beyond a platonic friendship, describing their association as professional mentorship with "no interest to declare" in official disclosures. His spokespeople and aides have echoed this, acknowledging awareness of a one-sided on Johnson's part but insisting it did not progress to impropriety or affect public duties. No independent , such as legal admissions or third-party witness testimonies under oath, has substantiated Arcuri's account of a sustained affair, and ethics inquiries into related matters found insufficient grounds for criminal proceedings on personal conduct alone.

Grants, Trade Missions, and Support

Jennifer Arcuri's technology firm, Inspy, received a total of £126,000 in grants from the Authority's tech funds, including the London and Overseas Enterprise Programme (), between 2013 and 2016. These funds supported her cybersecurity and initiatives, with specific awards including £20,000 in 2013 for event sponsorship related to the and additional tranches for . Despite this funding, Inspy did not consistently meet the eligibility criteria for certain mission slots, such as revenue thresholds or established export track records required for overseas participation. Arcuri was granted access to three international trade missions organized under Johnson's mayoral office: in 2013, New York in February 2015, and in 2014. Internal communications revealed that Johnson's office intervened on her behalf for the New York and trips after initial rejections by staff, who cited her firm's insufficient qualifications under program rules prioritizing mature London-based exporters. Emails from Johnson's team reportedly directed organizers to include her, bypassing standard vetting processes outlined in the Mayor's Fund for guidelines. These grants and mission participations aligned with broader objectives to enhance London's tech ecosystem and export competitiveness, potentially amplifying visibility for startups like Inspy's IoT security solutions in global markets. However, they prompted scrutiny over compliance with the London mayoral , which mandates disclosure of any personal interests that could influence public resource allocation to avoid perceived favoritism. Johnson asserted that selections followed merit-based procedures without his direct involvement, emphasizing the missions' role in fostering economic ties.

Controversies and Investigations

Allegations of Preferential Treatment

In September 2019, published reports alleging that , as , personally intervened to secure Jennifer Arcuri's participation in three overseas trade missions to New York, , and between 2013 and 2015, overriding objections from officials who noted her company, Innotech, failed to meet standard eligibility criteria such as minimum turnover requirements. These missions, organized under the UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) Sirius Programme, provided Arcuri with networking opportunities valued at taxpayer expense, prompting claims of undue favoritism tied to her acknowledged close personal friendship with Johnson, who had attended events at her loft apartment and promoted her tech initiatives. The reporting ignited accusations of , amplified by Labour Party figures and outlets like , which framed the episode as emblematic of Johnson's lax approach to conflicts of interest, especially given Arcuri's receipt of £126,000 in public funds across multiple grants—including two £7,500 UKTI awards in November 2013 for the Sirius Programme and event sponsorships totaling around £20,000 from the between 2012 and 2013. Ethics advocates and opposition MPs, such as Labour's , criticized the arrangements as breaching rules for public promotions, arguing that Arcuri's limited business track record—a startup focused on cybersecurity meetups with modest revenues—did not justify waiving criteria applied to other applicants. Such critiques, often from left-leaning media and political sources with documented adversarial stances toward Johnson, emphasized the optics of a mayoral office allegedly prioritizing personal ties over procedural rigor. Arcuri and Johnson's defenders countered that selections reflected genuine merit, pointing to her qualifications as a serial entrepreneur who organized influential tech events drawing hundreds of participants and advanced cybersecurity education in , aligning with the city's competitive . Arcuri publicly stated that "any grants received by my companies and any trade mission I joined were purely in respect of my business merits and nothing to do with my friendship with ," underscoring Innotech's role in fostering communities and tech talent pipelines. Johnson's team similarly denied impropriety, framing the support within his broader mayoral strategy to position as a global tech leader—evident in initiatives like Tech City UK, which disbursed millions in grants and mission slots to startups annually to attract investment and counter hubs like —though critics contended Arcuri's access exceeded typical benchmarks for comparable recipients. In May 2020, the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigated allegations concerning Jennifer Arcuri's receipt of public grants and participation in trade missions during Boris Johnson's tenure as , determining there was no evidence of criminal wrongdoing by Johnson or others involved. The probe highlighted procedural lapses, such as failure to adhere to records management guidance and deletion of relevant emails and phone records that impeded the inquiry, but concluded no further action was required. A separate government review in October 2019 assessed the £100,000 grant awarded to Arcuri's firm by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, deeming it appropriate despite the associations raised. In September 2022, a report referenced the IOPC findings of no criminal offence while recommending enhancements to City Hall's ethical guidelines and conflicts-of-interest protocols to prevent similar issues. In November 2021, Arcuri cooperated with the Authority's ethics watchdog by offering extracts from her personal diaries covering the relevant period, amid assessments of potential misconduct complaints against Johnson. Subsequent reviews, including a 2022 update on assessments, found no evidence supporting or breaches warranting sanctions beyond the prior procedural recommendations. In December 2023, Arcuri publicly offered her cybersecurity expertise to assist the UK's in recovering deleted messages from Johnson's devices, asserting that such from factory-reseted phones was feasible using advanced forensic techniques. This proposal underscored potential applications of her technology ventures in evidentiary recovery, though the inquiry's proceedings did not result in formal engagement on this offer.

Public Commentary

Advocacy for Alternative Narratives

In the years following , Jennifer Arcuri increasingly promoted perspectives challenging dominant institutional accounts of global events, particularly through platforms. On , where she amassed over 55,000 followers, and Telegram, with more than 6,000 subscribers by late 2021, she shared content aligning with QAnon-adjacent themes, including hashtags such as #itsOver and #ticktock that evoke anticipated reckonings against elite corruption. She amplified materials like the "Fall of the Cabal" video series on Telegram, interpreting them as evidence of systemic elite malfeasance beyond mainstream reporting. Arcuri's advocacy extended to skepticism of COVID-19 and related policies, framing them as tools of control rather than measures. On November 12, 2021, she tweeted that represented a "genocidal initiative," and on December 6, 2021, she criticized efforts to promote as deceptive. A Telegram livestream hosted by Arcuri on October 21, 2021, alleged Satanist infiltration of the government, linking figures like , , and to occult influences—a she tied to broader of globalist agendas and media consensus on responses. These claims positioned official s as potentially engineered to obscure causal realities of power concentration, prioritizing anecdotal patterns and leaked documents over peer-reviewed epidemiological data. Such positions drew sharp rebukes from misinformation researchers, who classified them as unsubstantiated "post-Q" conspiracies lacking empirical verification and risking public harm through amplified doubt in established . Arcuri's assertions, while defended by supporters as evidence-based scrutiny of elite opacity, contrasted with causal analyses grounded in randomized trials and excess mortality statistics that affirm in reducing severe outcomes. Her promotion of alternative views intersected with legal scrutiny in December 2021, when tweets alleging Andrew Neil's ties to Jeffrey Epstein's contact book—implying pedophilic associations—prompted Neil to file a libel claim in London's . The suit, seeking damages and an injunction, proceeded to a jurisdiction hearing in March 2022, where the court permitted service on Arcuri in the , citing arguable despite her non- residency. This case exemplified frictions between stringent standards and broader free speech allowances, eroding Arcuri's credibility among mainstream observers while bolstering her narrative of suppressed inquiry into powerful networks.

Recent Statements and Media Engagements

In February 2022, Jennifer Arcuri appeared on with host , describing as "completely different" from the individual she knew prior to the and attributing this to institutional influences that eroded personal freedoms she observed firsthand. She connected these personal insights to a wider erosion of trust in governmental and media institutions, emphasizing how policy responses amplified skepticism toward centralized authority. On December 7, 2023, Arcuri returned to , offering her cybersecurity expertise to recover approximately 5,000 missing messages from Johnson's tenure, which the had flagged as unprovided despite legal obligations for disclosure. She asserted that such data retrieval was feasible through forensic methods, positioning her intervention as a contribution to transparency in political and digital accountability, while critiquing the government's handling of pandemic-related communications as a significant breach of public trust. This proposal highlighted her technical proficiency in data privacy but drew perceptions from some commentators of leveraging prior associations with Johnson for renewed visibility. Arcuri's 2020s engagements have shifted toward tech-centric critiques of political opacity, underscoring recoverable digital trails in oversight failures, though her credibility in these forums remains debated due to intertwined personal history and institutional distrust narratives she promotes.

Personal Life

Family and Private Relationships

Jennifer Arcuri married Matthew Hickey, with whom she shares a born in 2017. The family relocated to , in June 2018. Arcuri has emphasized for her daughter, enrolling her in an immersive school in prior to the 2020 school closures and continuing daily lessons at home thereafter. She advocates for such approaches to foster broad linguistic skills amid family life in the U.S. Arcuri maintains privacy regarding her personal partnerships outside of public scrutiny, describing such matters as outside external purview while prioritizing family stability. She has avoided engaging with unsubstantiated rumors concerning child parentage, focusing instead on domestic routines.

Relocation and Current Endeavors

In June 2018, Jennifer Arcuri returned to from , where she had resided since to pursue entrepreneurial ventures in . This relocation marked a shift back to her U.S. roots, following the conclusion of her primary activities with the Innotech Network, a platform she founded to facilitate discussions on among entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers. Post-relocation, Arcuri has adopted a lower public profile while sustaining involvement in technology entrepreneurship, emphasizing cybersecurity and innovation in the . Her professional focus appears centered on leveraging prior experience in tech events and networking, though specific projects since 2018 remain largely undocumented in . As of , she describes herself as an active entrepreneur, with online presence highlighting preparation for economic shifts through knowledge-sharing channels, indicative of ongoing interest in tech-adjacent advisory or consulting roles. Arcuri has reflected on her London tenure as a catalyst for in the tech ecosystem, crediting it with broadening her policy insights despite challenges from public attention. This period informed her subsequent U.S.-based pursuits, positioning her for contributions to private-sector innovation amid a landscape favoring empirical tech advancements over regulatory hurdles.

References

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