Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • February 10, 2026

    Apple, Google Offer App Store Measures Under New UK Rules

    Britain's competition enforcer said Tuesday that Apple and Google have committed to fairness and transparency measures for their respective app stores, after the mobile platforms were designated as having strategic market status under the country's new digital regime.

  • February 10, 2026

    Solicitor Found Guilty Of Stalking Legal Blogger

    A London judge convicted a solicitor on Tuesday of stalking a legal blogger after he sent numerous, unwanted and "aggressive" emails proposing sex and threatening litigation if his advances were rejected.

  • February 10, 2026

    Capita Fails To Strike Out £4M Claim Over Data Breach

    Capita lost its bid on Tuesday to strike out a £4 million ($5.5 million) claim over the fallout from a cyberattack, with a London court rejecting the outsourcing giant's argument that the claimants' lawyers "tainted" the case by embellishing allegations of harm.

  • February 10, 2026

    FCA Takes Court Action Against Crypto Exchange HTX

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday it has started legal action against global crypto exchange HTX for illegally promoting crypto asset services to U.K. consumers, amid continuing communications on platforms including X, YouTube and LinkedIn.

  • February 10, 2026

    WhatsApp Can Contest €225M Privacy Fines After ECJ Ruling

    WhatsApp can pursue its challenge to an order from a European Union board for Irish authorities to increase a data-protection fine to €225 million ($268 million), the bloc's top court said Tuesday.

  • February 10, 2026

    Guralp Can't Bring DPA Appeal To UK Supreme Court

    The Serious Fraud Office said Tuesday that it will try to hold a British business liable for allegedly breaching the terms of its corporate bribery settlement after the company was denied permission to appeal the case to the U.K. Supreme Court.

  • February 10, 2026

    Ex-Clifford Chance Pro Says £8M Libel Claim Is SLAPP

    Legal commentator Dan Neidle asked a court on Tuesday to use new powers to throw out an £8 million ($11 million) libel claim accusing the former Clifford Chance partner of engaging in a vendetta against a barrister, arguing that the claim was launched to silence him.

  • February 10, 2026

    FCA Hits 2 With Fines For Insider Trading In Bidstack Shares

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it has hit a former interim financial director and a trader with a combined fine of £108,731 ($148,800) for insider dealing in shares in an advertising technology company.

  • February 09, 2026

    Deutsche Bank Escapes FDIC's RMBS Underwriter Claims

    A brokerage and investment banking arm of Deutsche Bank ducked a lawsuit the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. had brought against it over investment losses suffered by now-failed Citizens National Bank, after a New York federal judge determined Monday it did not have a relevant role in underwriting residential mortgage-backed securities Citizens bought more than two decades ago.

  • February 09, 2026

    Post Office Chair Backed Nixing Convictions Ahead Of Appeal

    The chair of the Post Office said he would support legislation to overturn earlier sub-postmaster convictions based on false accounting data weeks before the organization announced it would contest the first appeal, Parliament records show.

  • February 09, 2026

    Patisserie Valerie Fraud Trial Pushed Back To 2028

    A London judge on Monday pushed back the trial of four people charged with fraud over the collapse of high street café chain Patisserie Valerie until 2028, weeks before the case brought by the Serious Fraud Office was due to start.

  • February 09, 2026

    EU Moves To Block Meta's WhatsApp Restriction On AI Rivals

    The European Union's competition regulator revealed Monday it plans to impose restrictive measures on Meta over suspicions that the tech giant has breached antitrust rules by excluding third-party artificial intelligence apps from WhatsApp.

  • February 09, 2026

    Gov't Issues Gender Pension Gap Reporting Guide For LGPS

    The Government Actuary's Department has published guidance designed to help administering authorities within the Local Government Pension Scheme meet their new gender pension gap reporting obligations.

  • February 09, 2026

    €306M Money Laundering Network Sting Leads To 13 Arrests

    Law enforcement agencies in the European Union have arrested more than a dozen people in several raids after an investigation into a €306 million ($364.5 million) international money laundering scheme with links to drug trafficking and tax fraud.

  • February 08, 2026

    HMRC Nets £246M In Evasion-Focused Inheritance Tax Probes

    Britain's tax authority has recovered an additional £246 million ($336 million) in inheritance tax secured by investigations, according to data released Sunday.

  • February 06, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London saw a unit of Johnson & Johnson sue the U.S. government in a patent dispute, Southampton Football Club file a claim against Aviva Insurance, and an events business face a claim by Live Nation (Music) over potential licensing issues for Chelmsford City Live, a music festival that featured Justin Timberlake last year. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • February 06, 2026

    Elton John Says Mail Intrusion Was 'Outside Human Decency'

    Elton John told a London court Friday that alleged invasions of his family's privacy by the publisher of the Daily Mail were "outside even the most basic standards of human decency."

  • February 06, 2026

    EU Warns TikTok To Change 'Addictive' Design Or Face Fines

    The European Union's enforcement arm warned TikTok on Friday to change its "addictive" design to avoid potential financial penalties for breaching the bloc's digital safety rules.

  • February 06, 2026

    Payroll Pro Reinstated In Missing Wages Whistleblowing Case

    A tribunal has ordered a foam manufacturer to rehire a payroll administrator pending a full decision or settlement of her claims that bosses made her redundant for blowing the whistle on £100,000 ($136,150) missing from workers' wages.

  • February 06, 2026

    Watchdog Shuts Firms For Aiding 11K Fake Registrations

    The Insolvency Service has shut down three companies that aided more than 11,000 mainly Chinese businesses to gain a foothold in the U.K. — even though they did not have a physical presence in the country.

  • February 05, 2026

    Billionaire Lewis' Pilots Ink SEC Deals Over Insider Trading

    Two private-jet pilots for British billionaire Joseph Lewis have agreed to pay the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission a total of more than $233,300, resolving the regulators' civil claims accusing them of trading on confidential information, according to filings in New York federal court.

  • February 05, 2026

    Apple Avoids Heightened EU Rules For Ads, Maps

    The European Commission announced Thursday that Apple's Ads and Maps features aren't used enough in the European Union to warrant imposing interoperability and other obligations foisted on other services from Apple and other major technology companies deemed "gatekeepers" under the Digital Markets Act.

  • February 05, 2026

    OFSI Overhauls Its Powers, But Lawyers Doubt Impact

    Moves to double the fining powers of Britain's sanctions watchdog would have little impact on enforcement, lawyers fear, although they say that a proposed program for agreeing settlements with companies could be just enough to speed up the regulator's cases.

  • February 05, 2026

    Catalan Leaders Regain Immunity From Referendum Charges

    The European Union's highest court overturned the decision of the bloc's parliament to strip a Catalan separatist leader and two colleagues of political immunity on Thursday, after they were charged with misusing public money to fund a failed Catalan independence referendum.

  • February 05, 2026

    Plane Part Lessor Bids To Revive Breach Claim Over Fraud

    An Irish aircraft component lessor on Thursday sought to revive its claim against a Thai plane maintenance company it alleges caused the lessor to send $824,900 to someone impersonating both companies in emails. 

Expert Analysis

  • FCA's Odey Decision Is Wake-Up Call For Financial Firms

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    The Financial Conduct Authority recently banned hedge fund boss Crispin Odey from working in financial services, underscoring the critical importance the regulator places on whether individuals are fit and proper to perform regulated activities, and the connection between nonfinancial misconduct and the integrity of the financial markets, say lawyers at Pallas Partners.

  • How Ransomware Payment Reforms Could Affect UK Cos.

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    The Home Office’s recent proposals to ban ransomware payments by publicly owned bodies is a welcome first step in its aims to tackle the cybercrime industry, but the risk remains that hackers will now focus on private companies that are still permitted to pay a ransom, says Dominic Holden at Lawrence Stephens.

  • Key Takeaways From The 2025 Spring Antitrust Meeting

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    Leadership changes, shifting priorities and evolving enforcement tools dominated the conversation at the recent American Bar Association Spring Antitrust Meeting, as panelists explored competition policy under a second Trump administration, agency discretion under the 2023 merger guidelines and new frontiers in conduct enforcement, say attorneys at Freshfields.

  • Rising To The Task Of Online Safety Act Compliance

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    The arrival of the Online Safety Act’s deadlines for all in-scope services and children’s access in March and April, enabling the Office of Communications to begin enforcing safety duties regarding illegal content, presents formidable compliance challenges for affected businesses, says Louisa Chambers at Travers Smith.

  • Google Win Illustrates Hurdles To Mass Data Privacy Claims

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    The Court of Appeal's December decision in Prismall v. Google, holding each claimant in a mass data privacy suit must demonstrate an individualized and sufficiently serious injury, demonstrates the difficulty of using representative action to collect damages for misused private information, say lawyers at Seladore Legal.

  • What To Know About FCA's UK Listing Rules Proposal

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    A recent consultation paper from the Financial Conduct Authority aims to streamline the securities-listing process for U.K.-regulated markets, including by allowing issuers to submit a single application for all securities of the same class, and aligning the disclosure standards for low-denomination and wholesale bonds, say lawyers at Debevoise.

  • Opinion

    UK Gov't Needs To Take Action To Support Whistleblowing Bill

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    With a proposed Office of the Whistleblower Bill making its way through the U.K. Parliament, whistleblowing is starting to receive the attention it deserves, but the key to unlocking real change is for the government to take ownership of reform proposals and appoint an overarching whistleblowing champion, says Baroness Susan Kramer at the House of Lords.

  • Issues To Watch At ABA's Antitrust Spring Meeting

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    Attorneys at Freshfields consider the future of antitrust law and competition enforcement amid agency leadership changes and other emerging developments likely to dominate discussion at the American Bar Association's Antitrust Spring Meeting this week.

  • New UK Short Selling Rules Diverge From EU Regs

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    Although forthcoming changes to the U.K.’s short selling regulatory regime represent a welcome relaxation of restrictions and simplification of reporting processes, participants active in both the U.K. and EU markets will need to ensure compliance with two quite different sets of rules, says Ezra Zahabi at Akin.

  • How New EU Product Liability Directive Will Affect Tech And AI

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    While the European Union’s new defective product liability directive, effective from December 2026, primarily provides clarifications rather than significant changes, it reflects the EU's commitment to addressing consumer protection and accountability challenges presented by the digital economy and artificial intelligence, say lawyers at Latham.

  • What Latest FCA Portfolio Letter Means For Payments Firms

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    Charlotte Hill at Charles Russell discusses the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent portfolio letter to CEOs of payments firms, outlining the regulator’s expectations, and the steps that these companies may now need to take to ensure compliance and operational effectiveness.

  • ECB Guide Targets Harmonized Cyber Testing Approach

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    The European Central Bank’s recently updated guidance for testing organizational resilience against sophisticated cyberattacks is a significant step forward, highlighting the importance of a unified approach to financial sector cybersecurity and alignment with Digital Operational Resilience Act requirements, say Simon Onyons and Nebu Varghese at FTI Consulting.

  • Court Backlog Could Alter Work Safety Enforcement Priorities

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    While criminal prosecution remains the default course of action following the most serious workplace accidents, a record backlog of cases in the crown courts in England and Wales and safety regulators’ recognition of the need for change may allow for a more discerning approach, say lawyers at BCL Solicitors.

  • New CMA Powers Will Change Consumer Protection Regime

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    The Competition and Markets Authority’s imminent broadened powers to impose penalties on organizations for unethical or misleading practices are likely to transform the U.K.’s consumer protection regime, and may lead to a rise in private litigation and increased regulatory scrutiny, say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.

  • Opinion

    Prospects For New Fraud Prevention Prosecution Look Slim

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    With the Labour Party's inherited patchwork of Conservative Party corporate crime legislation for preventing fraud and corruption, the forthcoming Economic Crime Act’s failure to prevent fraud offense is unlikely to be successful in assisting prosecutors bring companies to justice, says Matthew Cowie at Rahman Ravelli.

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