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Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
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									October 08, 2025
									Tobacco Co. Made Timely Tax Refund Claims, UK Court RulesA British tobacco company didn't wait too long to seek repayment of taxes it mistakenly paid on foreign dividends, a U.K. appeals court ruled Wednesday, rejecting HM Revenue & Customs' contention that the claims were time-barred. 
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									October 08, 2025
									CPS Has Immunity Over Victim Address Leak In CourtA London appeals court ruled Wednesday that the Crown Prosecution Service is immune from a claim by a domestic abuse victim after its advocate inadvertently revealed the victim's new address to her abusive ex-partner in court. 
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									October 08, 2025
									Tech Biz Says Former Exec Lied About CEO's Links To RussiaA technology company has accused a former executive in a London court of targeting its CEO with a smear campaign about his alleged ties to Russian special services and organized crime networks. 
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									October 08, 2025
									'Finfluencers' Have To Wait Until 2027 For TrialThree men charged with advertising unauthorized investment opportunities in foreign exchange markets on social media will have to wait at least until late 2027 for their trials, a London judge said Wednesday. 
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									October 08, 2025
									Christie's Denies Hiding Picasso Crime Links In £14.5M CaseChristie's auction house has denied concealing the fact that a Picasso had been owned by a drug trafficker when it persuaded an art collector to bid £14.5 million ($19.5 million) for the painting. 
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									October 08, 2025
									Ex-Yellow Pages CFO Wins Costs In Baseless £1B Fraud CaseA London court has ruled that the former finance chief of Yellow Pages should have his costs covered in both criminal and review proceedings stemming from a private prosecutor's unfounded allegations that the boss oversaw a £1 billion ($1.3 billion) fraud. 
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									October 08, 2025
									Top Prosecutor Blames Gov't For Collapse Of China Spy TrialProsecutors dropped criminal charges against two men accused of spying for China because the government did not offer evidence that Beijing was a national security threat, according to the U.K.'s top prosecutor. 
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									October 07, 2025
									Wine Co. Exec Cops To Wire Fraud Conspiracy In $99M ScamA United Kingdom wine company executive pled guilty to wire fraud conspiracy in New York federal court Tuesday in a criminal case accusing him of scamming investors out of $99 million after persuading them to make loans using wine collections as collateral. 
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									October 07, 2025
									Ex-IT Exec Sues His Lawyers After Losing Hacking CaseA former chief technology officer has sued the law firm that represented him in civil proceedings against his ex-employer following his conviction for hacking their computer systems, accusing the law firm of breaching its duties by refusing to pursue an appeal argument. 
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									October 07, 2025
									FCA Says Lenders Will Pay Out £8B For Motor Finance ScandalThe Financial Conduct Authority released a proposed industry-wide program under consultation on Tuesday to compensate motor finance customers treated unfairly between 2007 and 2024, which it estimates will pay out £8.2 billion ($11 billion) in redress. 
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									October 07, 2025
									Class Reps Vie To Bring Rival Ad-Price Claims Against GoogleA former judge and a competition law scholar on Tuesday fought to bring rival multibillion-pound class actions against Google over allegedly unfair advertising pricing practices, each arguing at a London tribunal that they would be the better candidate to take on the tech giant. 
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									October 07, 2025
									Nick Candy Admits Looking Stupid Over Alleged €5M FraudProperty entrepreneur Nick Candy admitted that he "looks stupid" after being allegedly deceived by a dotcom-era investor into putting money in a failed social media startup, as he gave evidence on the first day of a €5 million ($5.8 million) trial. 
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									October 07, 2025
									KPMG Fined By FRC For 'Serious' Failings In Audit Of RetailerThe accounting watchdog said Tuesday that it has hit KPMG and one of its partners with a £711,000 ($952,000) fine for "serious" failings in an audit of an online retailer — the latest in a series of penalties imposed by the regulator. 
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									October 06, 2025
									SFO Stands By Ex-Deutsche Bank Trader's Fraud ConvictionThe Serious Fraud Office said Monday that the conviction of a former Deutsche Bank AG trader for conspiring to rig a benchmark interest rate remains safe even after the U.K.'s highest court overturned similar cases of two former bankers earlier this year. 
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									October 06, 2025
									London Casino Loses Dispute Over VAT Base MethodHM Revenue & Customs used the correct method for calculating the value-added tax base of a casino, a London court ruled Monday, rejecting the casino's arguments for the use of a special method that would have allowed it to recover more input VAT. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Carter-Ruck Pro Can't Get Info On SRA OneCoin InvestigationA Carter-Ruck partner who threatened to sue a whistleblower who exposed the multibillion-dollar OneCoin crypto-scam failed to convince a tribunal Monday to order the Solicitors Regulation Authority hand over information about the decision to press on with her prosecution. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Regulators Crack Down On Misleading Motor Finance AdsThe Financial Services Authority said Monday it has joined forces with the Solicitors Regulation Authority and other watchdogs to stop misleading advertising by claims management companies and law firms working on motor finance claims. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Qualcomm Accused Of Driving Up Phone Prices At £480M TrialBritish consumer group Which told a London tribunal that Qualcomm drove up Apple and Samsung phone prices by threatening to cut component supply in patent license negotiations, kicking off the trial of its £480 million ($655 million) case on Monday. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Lloyds Pushes To Slash £1.3B Arena TV Fraud Claims To £50MLloyds Bank PLC and its Bank of Scotland PLC subsidiary sought at a London court hearing on Monday to slash "extravagant" claims worth a combined £1.3 billion ($1.7 billion), brought by failed broadcast equipment companies at the center of fraud allegations. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Linklaters Fails To Toss Fintech Investor's Negligence CaseLinklaters lost an attempt on Monday to strike out a claim brought by a financial technology investor that the Magic Circle firm had negligently failed to spot a "large-scale fraud" against a company that the investor had acquired. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Former Petrobras Exec's $7.7M Asset Fight Delayed To 2026The challenge brought by a former Petrobras executive to the seizure from him by the Serious Fraud Office of $7.7 million will continue in 2026 to allow additional information about related Brazilian proceedings to be gathered, a London court ordered on Monday. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Ex-Soldier Gets 7.5 Years In Prison For £1.3M Ponzi FraudA former British Army rifleman convicted of running a £1.3 million ($1.75 million) Ponzi scheme was sentenced to seven-and-a-half years in prison on Monday, as a judge said it was a "great pity" he had not seen the strength of the evidence against him. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Justices Won't Review Ex-BigLaw Atty's OneCoin ConvictionThe U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up a former Locke Lord LLP partner's appeal of his conviction and prison sentence for helping launder roughly $400 million in proceeds from the infamous OneCoin cryptocurrency scheme. 
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									October 06, 2025
									Pogust Goodhead Seeks To Exit Dieselgate Lead RolePogust Goodhead asked a court on Monday for permission to exit its role as joint lead firm on the Dieselgate litigation, a week before the trial is due to begin in what is one of the largest group actions ever brought. 
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									October 03, 2025
									Ex-Petrobras Exec's Challenge To $7.7M Seizure DelayedA former Petrobras executive's challenge to the U.K's Serious Fraud Office's seizure of $7.7 million from him was delayed by a London court Friday, after the white-collar agency said it needed time to gather evidence about related proceedings in Brazil. 
Expert Analysis
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								Tools For Effective Asset Tracking In Offshore Jurisdictions  In light of a technology company's recent allegations that its former CEO maintained an undisclosed interest in offshore companies, practitioners may want to refresh their knowledge of the tool kit available for tracing and recovering allegedly misappropriated assets from both onshore and offshore jurisdictions, say lawyers at Walkers Global. 
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								Guidance Offers Clarity On UK Foreign Influence Registration  The Home Office's recently released guidance on the new Foreign Influence Registration Scheme provides important context for different industries and sectors, highlighting that careful assessment of interactions with foreign entities and governments is needed to determine whether registration is required, say lawyers at Skadden. 
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								FCA Review Highlights Valuation Standards For Private Funds  The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent review of private funds valuation practices underscores the increasing importance of conducting robust and independent procedures, offering an opportunity for fund managers to strengthen their current valuation frameworks and improve investor confidence, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig. 
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								UK Data Disputes Could Become Competition Class Actions  While mass data protection claims have chafed against the procedural restrictions that apply to class actions under U.K. law, it is possible these claims will be brought into the fold of the rapidly growing Competition Appeal Tribunal scene, says Aislinn Kelly-Lyth at Blackstone Chambers. 
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								What Cos. Need To Know About EU's AI Action Plan  The European Commission’s recently unveiled artificial intelligence continent action plan aims to position the European Union as a global AI leader, but with tension surrounding the EU AI Act’s compliance obligations, organizations should prepare for potential regulatory divergence between the plan's pro-innovation approach and the act's more prescriptive regime, says Marc Martin at Perkins Coie. 
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								Russia Sanctions Spotlight: Divergent Approaches Emerge  With indications of greater divergence and uncertainty in Russia sanctions policy between the U.K., European Union and U.S., there are four general principles and a range of compliance steps that businesses should bear in mind when assessing the impact of a potentially shifting landscape, says Alexandra Melia at Steptoe. 
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								What Santander Fraud Ruling Means For UK Banking Sector  A London court's recent judgment in Santander v. CCP Graduate School held that a bank does not owe any duty to third-party victims of authorized push payment fraud, reaffirming the steps banks are already taking to protect their own customers from sophisticated fraud mechanisms, say lawyers at Charles Russell. 
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								Fines Against Apple, Meta Set Digital Markets Act Precedent  The European Commission's recent fines against Apple and Meta, the first under the Digital Markets Act, send a clear message that the act's reach and influence on regulatory thinking is global, say lawyers at Waterfront Law. 
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								FCA Update Eases Private Stock Market Disclosure Rules  The Financial Conduct Authority’s recently updated proposals for the Private Intermittent Securities and Capital Exchange System would result in less onerous disclosure obligations for businesses, reflecting ongoing efforts to balance an attractive trading venue for private companies while maintaining sufficient investor protections, say lawyers at Debevoise. 
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								Key Questions As Court Mulls Traders' Libor Convictions  The U.K. Supreme Court is considering whether to overturn two traders’ Libor and Euribor manipulation convictions, with the appeal reinvigorating debate over the breadth of English common law’s conspiracy to defraud offense and raising questions about the limits of a judge’s role in criminal jury trials, says Ellen Gallagher at Vardags. 
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								Foreign Countries Have Strong Foundation To Fill FCPA Void  Though the U.S. has paused enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, liberal democracies across the globe are well equipped to reverse any setback in anti-corruption enforcement, potentially heightening prosecution risk for companies headquartered in the U.S., says Stephen Kohn at Kohn Kohn. 
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								Code Of Practice Signals Aim To Bolster UK Software Security  The U.K. government’s new code of practice for software vendors includes several principles that will help developers and distributors integrate security best practices, but without mandatory adoption, market inconsistencies may emerge, say lawyers at Deloitte. 
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								Expect Complex Ruling From UK Justices In Car Dealer Case  While recent arguments before the U.K. Supreme Court in a consumer test case on motor finance commissions reveal the court’s take on several points argued, application of the upcoming decision will be both nuanced and fact-sensitive, so market participants wishing to prepare do not have a simple task, says Tom Grodecki at Cadwalader. 
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								Why Cos. Should Investigate Unethical Supply Chain Conduct  The U.K. government’s recent updated guidance for businesses on reporting slavery and human trafficking in supply chains underscores the urgent need for companies to adopt transparent and measurable due diligence practices, reinforcing the broader need for proactive internal investigations into unethical or criminal conduct, say lawyers at Seladore and Matrix Chambers. 
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								FCA Bulletin Highlights Risks Of Leaking Inside M&A Info  The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent bulletin on the consequences of leaking sensitive information during transactions, warning that such disclosure may result in market abuse allegations, demonstrates the regulator’s determination to root out and penalize insider dealing, say lawyers at Cadwalader.