Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
-
January 27, 2026
Slapped Down: SRA At Crossroads After SLAPP Setbacks
The string of failed prosecutions brought by the Solicitors Regulation Authority against City lawyers accused of trying to silence journalists on behalf of clients has raised questions about its enforcement strategy, with critics accusing the watchdog of overreaching its rules.
-
January 27, 2026
Ex-OPEC Head Accused Of Taking Cash, Cars, Jets In Bribes
Diezani Alison-Madueke lived a "life of luxury" taking bribes that included cash, cars and the use of high-end properties to "favor" executives in Nigeria's oil and gas industry, prosecutors said at the start of her criminal trial in London on Tuesday.
-
January 27, 2026
Execs Say $22M Investec Loan Breached Sberbank Sanctions
Two business executives have denied owing Investec Bank PLC almost £22 million ($30.2 million) over loan agreements, arguing that the Anglo-South African lender knew the deals were designed to aid the purchase of a Russian bank's assets in breach of sanctions.
-
January 27, 2026
Home Office Pressed Over Failure To Explain RTW Fine
The Home Office must explain how it has determined that someone does not have the right to work in the U.K. when it issues penalty notices to employers, a restaurant argued at Britain's top court on Tuesday.
-
January 27, 2026
Ex-Biotech CEO Wins New Shot At Whistleblowing Claim
A London appeals judge has handed the sacked chief executive of a biotechnology company a second shot at his whistleblowing claim, slamming an earlier tribunal's "wholly insufficient" assessment of his claimed protected disclosures.
-
January 27, 2026
CMA Seeks To Appeal Re-Do Of £70M Pfizer, Flynn Drug Fines
The Competition and Markets Authority sought permission from the Court of Appeal on Tuesday to challenge a decision that criticized and revised the £70 million ($96 million) in fines it issued to Pfizer and Flynn Pharma for excessive pricing.
-
January 26, 2026
Scots Law Society Beats Bias Claim Over Conduct Probe
A tribunal has ruled that the Scottish law society did not discriminate against a qualified lawyer based on his Roman Catholic Christian faith by hastily investigating a complaint of misconduct against him.
-
January 26, 2026
UK To Create 'British FBI' To Tackle Fraud, Serious Crime
The U.K. government announced it will create a new national police force dubbed the "British FBI" to investigate fraud by merging the National Crime Agency with other law enforcement agencies.
-
January 26, 2026
Mail's Spying Gave Me 'Sleepless Nights,' Sadie Frost Says
Actor Sadie Frost told a London court on Monday that the publisher of the Daily Mail had "violated" her through stories about her personal life, alleging that its journalists had used information gained through unlawful methods such as tapping her landline phone.
-
January 26, 2026
UK Fines Bank Of Scotland For Russia Sanctions Breach
The U.K. sanctions policing body said Monday that it has fined Bank of Scotland PLC, which is wholly owned by Lloyds Banking Group, £160,000 ($218,354) for serious breaches of the government's Russia sanctions rules by allowing payments to and from the account of a sanctioned individual.
-
January 26, 2026
Saudi Arabia Must Pay £3M To Dissident In Spyware Case
Saudi Arabia must pay more than £3 million ($4.1 million) in damages to a human rights activist critical of the government for "the most acute intrusion" of his private life, involving phone hacking and a targeted assault, a London court ordered Monday.
-
January 26, 2026
FCA Warns Crypto Sector Against Mistreating Consumers
The Financial Conduct Authority has warned crypto asset businesses against providing unsuitable products to consumers in draft guidance on applying the Consumer Duty under the crypto asset regime that comes into force in 2026.
-
January 23, 2026
Insider Trading Presumption Challenged By EU Adviser
An investment bank does not commit insider dealing merely by executing a client's share sale, unless regulators can show the bank held inside information and acted outside its expected professional standards, an adviser to the European Union's top court has said.
-
January 23, 2026
Danish Regulator Hits Saxo Bank With $49M AML Fine
The Danish finance regulator said Friday that it imposed a 313 million Danish kroner ($49 million) fine on Danish bank Saxo over anti-money laundering compliance failures.
-
January 23, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London saw Travelers Insurance hit with a claim from a property buyer over a payout tied to collapsed law firm Axiom Ince, Swedish music group Pophouse Entertainment clash with the production company that helped it create the ABBA Voyage experience, and biotech company Vertex Pharmaceuticals sue rival entity ToolGen for patent infringement.
-
January 23, 2026
Post Office Says Settlement Could Bar Sub-Postmaster's Claim
The Post Office said Friday that a settlement it reached with people it wrongly prosecuted might bar a former sub-postmaster from suing it over claims it fraudulently obtained a civil judgment against him over an accounting shortfall.
-
January 23, 2026
FCA Proposes More Standards For Crypto Asset Regulation
The Financial Conduct Authority proposed Friday further rules on how crypto asset companies should treat consumers under the new regulatory regime for digital assets due for implementation later this year.
-
January 23, 2026
Nigeria Fails To Overturn Delay To £50M Costs Recovery Bid
Nigeria must wait until after a costs assessment to seek an order to recover its £50 million ($68 million) legal bill from the litigation-funders of an energy company that defrauded the West African state in arbitration proceedings.
-
January 23, 2026
Seddons Hires Financial Crime Head From Russell-Cooke
Seddons GSC has hired Frances Murray from Russell-Cooke to launch and lead its new financial crime practice.
-
January 22, 2026
UK Trading Co. Escapes £1.5M In Penalties For Tax Scheme
HM Revenue & Customs lacked sufficient evidence to justify more than £1.5 million ($2 million) in penalties on a securities trading company for careless and deliberate inaccuracies on its returns linked to a tax avoidance scheme involving an employee benefit trust, the Upper Tribunal ruled.
-
January 22, 2026
Ex-Trading Co. CEO Denies Signing Fake Contract In $19M Trial
The former chief executive of trading technology business Finalto didn't use the company as "a vehicle for fraud" by signing a sham employment contract, he said in evidence at a trial where he and another executive are seeking more than $19 million in unpaid benefits.
-
January 22, 2026
Accomplice In Chinese Bitcoin Fraud To Repay £5.6M
A London court on Thursday ordered a convicted money launderer to repay £5.6 million ($7.6 million) for his role in a conspiracy to buy cryptocurrencies using money siphoned off from tens of thousands of Chinese investors.
-
January 22, 2026
Judge-Only Trials Won't Ease Case Backlog, Law Society Says
Dropping jury trials for all but the most serious offenses would have "a negligible impact" on the backlog of cases waiting to be heard in the criminal courts and the government should instead invest in the entire justice system, the Law Society said Thursday.
-
January 22, 2026
Ethanol Biz Loses Bid To Overturn €48M Price-Fixing Fine
A Swedish ethanol producer failed on Thursday to overturn a €47.7 million ($55.9 million) fine for colluding to maintain high prices by market manipulation after a European appeals court ruled that a competition watchdog did not presume it was guilty.
-
January 22, 2026
Liz Hurley Tells Mail Privacy Trial Her Home Was Bugged
Liz Hurley alleged at the trial over her privacy claim against the publisher of the Daily Mail on Thursday that private investigators working for the company had tapped her landline phone, secretly placed microphones at her home and unlawfully obtained her medical information.
Expert Analysis
-
What Draft AML Reforms Mean For UK Financial Sector
HM Treasury’s recently published draft regulations amending the U.K. Money Laundering Regulations, although not as material as expected, are a step toward a targeted risk-based approach, which the industry will welcome, say lawyers at Ropes & Gray.
-
What Key EU Data Ruling Means For Cross-Border Transfers
The European Union Court of Justice’s recent judgment in European Data Protection Supervisor v. Single Resolution Board takes a recipient-specific approach concerning pseudonymized information, but financial services firms making international transfers should follow the draft EU Data Protection Board guidelines’ current stricter approach, says Nathalie Moreno at Kennedys Law.
-
EU-US Data Transfer Ruling Offers Reassurance To Cos.
The European Union General Court’s recent upholding of the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework in Latombe v. European Commission, although subject to appeal, provides companies with legal certainty for the first time by allowing the transfer of European Economic Area personal data without relying on alternative mechanisms, say lawyers at Wilson Sonsini.
-
Supreme Court Ruling Stands Firm On Trust Law Principles
The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent strict application of trust law in Stevens v. Hotel Portfolio may render it more difficult for lawyers in future cases to make arguments based on a holistic assessment of the facts, says Olivia Retter at Quinn Emanuel.
-
FCA's Woodford Fine Sends Warning To Fund Managers
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent decisions concerning Neil Woodford and the collapse of Woodford Investment Management mark an important moment for the U.K. investment industry, underscoring the regulator's focus on senior managers' personal accountability and the importance of putting investors’ interests at the heart of decision-making, say lawyers at Irwin Mitchell.
-
How Data Use Act Tightens Complaint Handling Procedures
Recently effective Data Use Act procedural requirements are coinciding with an artificial intelligence-driven increase in complaints from users about data subject access request responses, so organizations need to formalize their grievance process to prevent intervention by the Information Commissioner's Office and potential penalties, say lawyers at Womble Bond.
-
UK Supreme Court Dissent May Spark Sanctions Debate
While the recent U.K. Supreme Court's rejection of Eugene Shvidler’s appeal determined that sanctions decisions are primarily the government’s preserve, Justice Leggatt’s dissenting view that judges are better placed to assess proportionality will cause ripples and may mark a material shift in how future appeals are approached, say lawyers at Seladore.
-
What EBA Report Means For Non-EU Financial Firms
In a recent report concerning unregulated third country banks, the European Banking Authority decided not to extend a bank-to-bank exemption under the Capital Requirements Directive, raising a number of compliance issues for cross-border services, say lawyers at A&O Shearman.
-
HMRC's Automation Shift Likely To Alter Tax Adviser Role
HM Revenue & Customs’ recently released digital transformation road map promises greater efficiency and a modernized compliance regime, but the increased automation could also mean that the tax adviser role will become more proactive and more defensive, say lawyers at RPC.
-
What UK's New Prosecution Guidance Means For Compliance
Recent guidance from the U.K.'s Serious Fraud Office and Crown Prosecution Service, aligning their approach with the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act, offers a timely prompt for corporate boards and legal teams to update their risk management frameworks, say lawyers at Signature Litigation.
-
Viral Comms Crises Create Dual Corp. Governance Threats
As legislative hearings increase in frequency and social media fuels their reputational impact, corporate legal teams face a new dual challenge that reflects a fundamental shift in accountability and demands new strategies, governance frameworks and organizational capabilities, says Joanna Ludlam at Jenner & Block.
-
How AI May Have Made A Difference In Monzo Bank Breaches
Artificial intelligence tools have the capabilities needed to keep pace with increasingly sophisticated threats, and such tools might have helped prevent the anti-money laundering failures that led to the recent £21.1 million fine against Monzo Bank, says Alexander Vilardo at Howard Kennedy.
-
A Softer Tack For Online Ads Marks Next Step In Data Reform
While the initiative of the U.K. Information Commissioner's Office to relax enforcement of advertising cookie consent represents a welcome attempt to balance privacy protection and commercial realities, several questions remain that will limit companies' ability to benefit from the U.K. proposals, say lawyers at Skadden.
-
CMA App Store Mandates Fall Short Of Regulatory Ambitions
The Competition and Markets Authority's recent proposals to loosen Google and Apple’s mobile platform duopoly are a far cry from the assertive and wide-reaching interventions that advocates of the Digital Markets Unit had hoped to see from the new competition regulator, says Ronan Scanlan at Steptoe.
-
Catching Up On Simplified EU Sustainability Disclosure Rules
A recent proposal to streamline implementation of the EU’s Taxonomy Regulation contains measures that would reduce companies’ sustainable investment reporting and compliance requirements, and better support the EU’s climate and environmental goals, say lawyers at Proskauer.