Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • 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.

  • January 22, 2026

    SFO Charges Two Ex-Funeral Directors With Fraud

    Britain's white-collar crime enforcer charged two former funeral directors with fraud on Thursday over allegations that they misled thousands of individuals after its program collapsed with debts in excess of £70 million ($93 million).

  • January 21, 2026

    Lessor Reaches Settlement With Insurer Over Stranded Planes

    An aircraft lessor has reached a settlement with an insurance company that it had claimed should partly cover for an alleged $129 million loss from planes stranded in Russia after the country's invasion of Ukraine.

  • January 21, 2026

    Starmer Says UK Won't Yield On Trump Greenland Tariffs

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Wednesday that he will not yield to President Donald Trump's threats to impose tariffs on the U.K. and several European Union countries if they don't negotiate a sale of Greenland to the U.S.

  • January 21, 2026

    Prince Harry Tells Court Daily Mail 'Commercialized' His Life

    Prince Harry said Wednesday that his private life had been "commercialized" as he made a visibly emotional appearance at the trial of his and six other public figures' privacy claims against the publisher of the Daily Mail.

  • January 21, 2026

    Software Co. Sues Rival For Alleged Data Scraping Attacks

    A technology company has sued the owner of the OnlyMonster platform over an alleged series of data-scraping cyberattacks, accusing the rival company and its affiliates of stealing sensitive client and business information.

  • January 21, 2026

    Selling Stolen Bikes Counts As Work To Bar Benefit Claim

    An appeals court said Wednesday that a man imprisoned for selling stolen bikes "at scale" was not entitled to claim Employment Support Allowance while he did so, ruling that the criminal activity he engaged in counted as work.

  • January 21, 2026

    SFO Director's Surprise Exit Reignites Debate Over Its Future

    Nick Ephgrave's surprise retirement from the Serious Fraud Office could turn up the heat on a simmering debate about the future of the agency and a potential merger with other law enforcement authorities such as the National Crime Agency, lawyers say.

  • January 21, 2026

    Gov't Overhaul Plan For CMA Merger Reviews Sparks Doubts

    Proposals by the government to abolish the Competition and Markets Authority's independent decision-making panel without replacing it with easier mechanisms to appeal rulings might ultimately harm the businesses that Whitehall wants to attract, experts have warned.

  • January 20, 2026

    Letby Avoids Further Criminal Charges Over Baby Deaths

    Prosecutors said Tuesday that they would not be charging Lucy Letby with the murder and attempted murder of nine more infants because there was not enough evidence to pursue the case, as the former nurse serves out her whole-life prison sentence. 

  • January 20, 2026

    UK Launches Service To Combat Cyber Crime And Fraud

    The U.K. has launched a national reporting and intelligence service for fraud and cyber crime intended to help protect victims and tackle billions of pounds lost each year, a police force announced Tuesday.

  • January 20, 2026

    Ex-Entain Execs Lose Privacy Claim Against Watchdog

    Two former executives at the predecessor of betting giant Entain have lost their claim that Britain's gambling regulator wrongly published private and confidential information about them in its announcement of regulatory review.

  • January 20, 2026

    Mail Says Celebs 'Clutching At Straws' In Privacy Trial

    The publisher of the Daily Mail newspaper said Tuesday that Prince Harry and other public figures were "clutching at straws" in their case alleging that its journalists had paid for and used unlawfully-obtained information for decades.

  • January 20, 2026

    Bar Council Appoints 1st Commissioner To Fight Misconduct

    The Bar Council said Tuesday that it has appointed a former government minister as its first commissioner for conduct to tackle what an independent review described as an "unsustainable" situation of bullying and sexual harassment in the profession.

  • January 20, 2026

    Russell Brand Faces New Rape, Sexual Assault Charges

    Actor and comedian Russell Brand attended a London court remotely on Tuesday to face two new charges of rape and sexual assault.

  • January 20, 2026

    Gov't Scraps Long-Awaited UK Audit Sector Reforms

    The government said on Tuesday that it would not push ahead with long-awaited audit and governance reforms designed to improve trust in the sector after a string of high-profile accounting scandals.

Expert Analysis

  • EU Investment Reporting Rules Letup Signals Pragmatic Shift

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    While investment companies remain subject to far-reaching disclosure obligations under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation, new guidance from the European Commission on reporting passive limited partner commitments represents a drastic simplification and burden reduction, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.

  • SFO's 2-Year Transformation Signals Crackdown On Fraud

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    Two years after Nick Ephgrave’s appointment as director of the Serious Fraud Office, the introduction of new corporate criminal offenses and strengthened investigative methods sends a clear message to corporations that the agency is delivering on its promise to be bolder and more proactive about tackling fraud, say lawyers at BCL Solicitors.

  • What To Know About Interim Licenses In Global FRAND Cases

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    Recent U.K. court decisions have shaped a framework for interim licenses in global standard-essential patent disputes, under which parties can benefit from operating on temporary terms while a court determines the final fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory terms — but the future of this developing remedy is in doubt, say attorneys at Fish & Richardson.

  • How EU And UK Consumer Loan Protections Are Shifting

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    As market evolution and digitalization motivate both the European Union and the U.K. to revamp consumer protections around lending, the potential for divergence between these rules will pose new challenges for cross-border consumer credit lenders, say lawyers at Skadden.

  • EBA Guidance Shakes Up EU Securitization Market Practices

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    Although the European Banking Authority’s recent questioning of the common use of conditional sale agreements to season assets when setting up securitizations has come as an unwelcome surprise, competent regulators are expected to follow the EBA guidance, even though as a Q&A response it is not legally binding, say lawyers at Debevoise.

  • EU Act Establishes Data Sharing Rules, But Hurdles Remain

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    The recently effective European Union Data Act provisions establish harmonized rules to unlock the use of data generated by technology-embedded software, but leave practical challenges that organizations will need to navigate to comply with cross-border requirements, say lawyers at King & Spalding.

  • Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Arbitrator's Conviction Upheld

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    The Supreme Court of Spain recently upheld the criminal conviction of arbitrator Gonzalo Stampa for grave disobedience to judicial authority, rejecting the proposition that an arbitrator's independence can prevail over a court order retroactively disabling the very judicial act conferring arbitral jurisdiction, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray's Inn.

  • Reviewing EU Competition Policy 1 Year After Draghi's Report

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    Implementation of the Mario Draghi report’s proposals to revamp European Union competition policy is currently case-specific, making it less visible, and more needs to be done in the way of merger review and antitrust enforcement, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • 5 Ways To Address The Legal Risks Of Employee AI Use

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    Employees’ use of unauthorized artificial intelligence tools has become a regulatory issue, and in-house legal counsel are best placed to close the gap between governance controls and innovation, mitigating the risk of organizations' exposure to noncompliance with European Union and U.K. data protection requirements, say lawyers at MoFo.

  • Opinion

    New US-UK Tech Deal Offers Opportunities To Boost Growth

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    The recently announced U.S. and U.K. Technology Prosperity Deal, encouraging businesses on both sides of the Atlantic to work together toward technological advance, will drive both investment in U.K. capabilities and returns for U.S. investors, says Peter Watts at Hogan Lovells.

  • What Draft AML Reforms Mean For UK Financial Sector

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    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

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    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.

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    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

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    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

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    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.

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