Meeting request denied when sent to certain user

B

Bret S. Taylor

I have a situation that I haven't found a fix for. I
have a user (USER 1) who had given permissions on her
calendar for another user (USER 2) to view. USER 2 left
our organisation about 10 months ago. The USER 2 account
was deleted and their permissions were removed for the
calendar of USER 1.

Here is the problem:

If anyone sends a meeting request to USER 1 it
automatically comes back in Outlook with this:

FROM: System Administrator
SUBJECT: Undeliverable:Delivery Status Notification
(Failure)
Your message did not reach some or all of the intended
recipients.

Subject:
Sent: 2/10/2003 8:20 PM

The following recipient(s) could not be reached:

USER 2 on 2/10/2003 8:20 PM
The e-mail account does not exist at the
organization this message was sent to. Check the e-mail
address, or contact the recipient directly to find out
the correct address.

DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY IDEAS HOW TO FIX THIS??? I have
looked through registry settings, Exchange Server, Active
Directory; you name it, I've done it.

Any help you could give would be appreciated.
 
K

Kasey Quanrud [MS]

First step, in Outlook Tools>Options>Delegates and make sure the user is not
listed there.

Then check the users rules, sometimes a phantom rule the user forgot about
causes issues like this.

Next, Shutdown all of the users Outlook sessions. Using a tool like mdbvu
(an MDB viewing tool), delete the private free/busy message from the users
store. This message is located in "Root>non_ipm_subtree>freebusy>", name
"localfreebusy". Start the users session back up, and add something to the
user's calendar, this will force the f/b message to be regenerated.

The next step depend on the version of Exchange you are using, in 2003, open
the users profile through Active Directory. Click "Exchange General" tab,
and click "Delivery Options". Make sure he user is not listed as a Send on
behalf or Forward to.

If you run into trouble, follow up offline with me.

~Kasey
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top