Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • February 18, 2025

    Quarter Of UK Cos. Hit By Civil Unrest In 2024, Broker Says

    More than one in four U.K. businesses were impacted by civil unrest in 2024, broker Gallagher said Tuesday, with similar numbers reportedly reviewing their insurance to ensure they are covered in the event of future damage or disruption.

  • February 18, 2025

    EU Watchdog To Set Knowledge Standard For Crypto Advisers

    The European Union's financial markets regulator has proposed guidelines setting minimum knowledge standards for advisers and information providers at crypto-asset service providers.

  • February 18, 2025

    Trading Firm Fined £1.7M For Financial Crime Control Failings

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday it has fined trader Mako Financial Markets Partnership LLP £1.66 million ($2 million) for its failure to have effective controls against financial crime in cum-ex trading.

  • February 17, 2025

    Russell Brand Sued By Macmillan After Suspended Book Deal 

    Macmillan Publishers International has sued Russell Brand two years after pausing the launch of the comedian's "Recovery" self-help book and all future projects over a spate of sexual assault and rape accusations.

  • February 17, 2025

    Bulgarian Decorator In Russia Spy Trial Claims He Was Duped

    A painter decorator accused of spying for Russia "sang like Justin Bieber" to the police after he realized he had been "duped" into believing he was assisting Interpol, his barrister told a London trial on Monday.

  • February 17, 2025

    Gov't Can't Intervene In Motor Finance Case At Top Court

    The U.K. government has been refused permission to intervene in a landmark appeal over motor finance commission payments that has left finance firms fearing they will be hit with a huge compensation bill, Britain's highest court confirmed Monday. 

  • February 17, 2025

    Financial Adviser Fired For Calling Boss 'Idiot' Wins Claim

    An adviser at a financial planner has won his claim alleging that the company botched his firing over explicit language he used to describe his boss — but could not convince the tribunal that he was a whistleblower.

  • February 17, 2025

    Pensions Watchdog To Go Further On Prudential Oversight

    The retirement savings watchdog said Monday it will go further this year on managing risks affecting the wider pensions market and financial ecosystem, after announcing last year it would take on a more "prudential" approach to supervising the sector.

  • February 17, 2025

    Ex-NCA Manager Wins £63K For Surprise Poor Review 

    An employment tribunal has ordered the National Crime Agency to pay a former senior manager £63,264 ($80,000), after an underperformance rating that came "without prior warning" caused her upset and distress and forced her to quit.  

  • February 17, 2025

    Former Entain Execs Sue Addleshaw For Privileged Docs

    The former chief executive at the predecessor of Entain and the betting giant's former chair have sued Addleshaw Goddard LLP, seeking the release of privileged advice believed to have been turned over to regulators and prosecutors in a major bribery investigation.

  • February 17, 2025

    E-Money Biz Enters Insolvency After FCA Ban Amid AML Fears

    Payment services company Nvayo has entered into special administration, six months after it was banned from electronic money services because of serious concerns about its compliance with anti-money laundering regulations, the Financial Conduct Authority has said.

  • February 14, 2025

    Heineken Can Face €160M Antitrust Claim In Netherlands

    Heineken can face antitrust claims worth over €160 million ($168 million) in its homeland, the Netherlands, after the European Union's highest court ruled that there was nothing preventing the Dutch courts from dealing with the case.

  • February 14, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen Spice Girls star Mel B's ex-husband bring a defamation claim against the publisher of The Sun, a hotel sue a former director convicted of embezzling its funds for breach of fiduciary duty, and comedian Russell Brand face a sexual abuse claim. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • February 14, 2025

    Trump Tariff Plan Sparks UK Fears Of Retaliation For VAT

    The U.K. could be hit with tariffs as part of U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to impose reciprocal measures on countries that levy value-added taxes on American products, with sectors such as pharmaceuticals under threat, experts in Britain warned.

  • February 14, 2025

    Shell Calls Nigerian Oil Spill Claims 'Human Rights Mysticism'

    Shell argued at a London court on Friday that it could not be held liable to thousands of Nigerian villagers for widespread pollution of the Niger Delta area, saying that the claimants' arguments were "human rights mysticism."

  • February 14, 2025

    ENRC Can't Directly Appeal $120M Cut From SFO Claim

    A London judge Friday refused Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. a direct route to challenge his decision to pare its claim against the Serious Fraud Office over its criminal investigation, a move the company's lawyers say "went behind" its evidence and should have been aired at trial.

  • February 14, 2025

    Magomedov Must Pay £7M Costs Amid 'Secrecy' Over Funding

    Imprisoned oligarch Ziyavudin Magomedov must pay £7.3 million ($9.2 million) in interim court costs after losing his claim over an alleged Russian state-led conspiracy to strip his assets, as a judge criticized on Friday the "secrecy" surrounding who funded the litigation.

  • February 14, 2025

    5 Questions For Spencer West Partner Karl Foster

    The Financial Conduct Authority's approach to enforcement and consumer protection has come up against government economic growth priorities and resistance from the sector to its proposals to "name and shame" companies early on during regulatory probes.

  • February 14, 2025

    EU Watchdog Probes Bloc-Wide Fund Manager Compliance

    The European Union's financial markets regulator on Friday launched a bloc-wide probe with national regulators on compliance and internal audit functions of fund managers.

  • February 13, 2025

    Barclays Reveals FCA Probe Over Money Laundering Controls

    Barclays revealed in its annual report on Thursday that it is being probed by the Financial Conduct Authority over its compliance with anti-money laundering and financial crime regulations.

  • February 13, 2025

    Immigration Officer Loses Pay Bid After Calling Boss A Nazi

    An employment tribunal has declined to secure the pay of a former chief immigration officer who was sacked after likening his superior to top Nazi Heinrich Himmler, ruling that his whistleblowing allegations are unlikely to hold up.

  • February 13, 2025

    Alleged Russian Spy Says She Was Used By Lying Partner

    A woman on trial for allegedly spying for Russia didn't know she was working for the Kremlin because her ex-partner, who claimed he worked for Interpol and had cancer, lied to her "on a fundamental level," her lawyers told a London jury Thursday.

  • February 13, 2025

    Former SFO HR Boss Loses Claim He Was Forced Out

    A former head of human resources at the Serious Fraud Office has lost his case that he was forced to quit the white-collar crime agency because executives "deliberately and increasingly undermined" him and hired someone else to take over his duties.

  • February 13, 2025

    Shell's Negligence Caused Oil Pollution, Nigerian Villagers Say

    Thousands of Nigerian villagers urged the High Court on Thursday to find that Shell can be held liable for environmental damage that they say was a foreseeable consequence of the energy giant failing to stop pipeline sabotage and theft.

  • February 13, 2025

    Insider Dealing Suspect Denies Illegally Profiting From Trades

    A man appeared at a criminal court in London on Thursday to deny using inside information to profit from oil and gas stocks over a four-year period.

Expert Analysis

  • Traversing The Web Of Nonjudicial Grievance Mechanisms

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    Attorneys at Covington provide an overview of how companies can best align their environmental and human rights compliance with "hard-law" requirements like the EU's recently approved Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive while also navigating the complex global network of existing nonjudicial grievance mechanisms.

  • Opinion

    FCA Greenwashing Rules Need To Be Stronger To Be Effective

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    The Financial Conduct Authority's forthcoming anti-greenwashing measures, aimed at ensuring the veracity of regulated entities’ statements about sustainability credentials, need external scrutiny and an effective definition of "corporate social responsibility" to give them bite, says Jingchen Zhao at Nottingham Trent University.

  • Companies House False Filings Raise Issues Of Integrity

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    A recent spate of unauthorized company filings with Companies House raises specific concerns for secured lenders, but also highlights the potential for false filings to be used to facilitate fraudulent schemes, says Daniel Sullivan at Charles Russell.

  • Gov't Probe Highlights Computer-Based Evidence Issues

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    A recently launched U.K. Home Office probe, following the alleged use of faulty data in criminal cases, illuminates the need for scrutiny on the presumed reliability of evidence from computer-based systems, says Jessica Sobey at Stokoe Partnership.

  • UK Courts Continue To Struggle With Crypto-Asset Cases

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    Although the common law has proved capable of applying established principles to crypto-assets, recent cases highlight persistent challenges in identifying defendants, locating assets and determining jurisdiction, suggesting that any meaningful development will likely come from legislative or regulatory change, say Emily Saunderson and Sam Mitchell at Quadrant Chambers.

  • Why Computer Evidence Is Not Always Reliable In Court

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    Recent challenges to the admissibility of encrypted communication from the messaging tool EncroChat highlight the flawed presumption in the U.K. common law framework that computer evidence is always accurate, and why a nuanced assessment of such evidence is needed, say Sam De Silva and Josie Welland at CMS Legal.

  • Comparing The UK And EU Approaches To AI Regulation

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    While there are significant points of convergence between the recently published U.K. approach to artificial intelligence regulation and the EU AI Act, there is also notable divergence between them, and it appears that the U.K. will remain a less regulatory environment for AI in the foreseeable future, say lawyers at Steptoe.

  • Lessons On Using 3rd-Party Disclosure Orders In Fraud Cases

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    The expansion of the gateway for service out of jurisdiction regarding third-party information orders has proven to be an effective tool against fraud since it was introduced in 2022, and recent case law offers practical tips on what applicants should be aware of when submitting such orders, says Rosie Wild at Cooke Young.

  • Compliance Points To Know About The EU Digital Services Act

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    Online service providers in the European Union should prioritize understanding the scope of the recently implemented Digital Services Act, their specific legal obligations under it and the practical steps they must take to comply with the new law while obeying a raft of overlapping EU digital reforms, say Leo Moore and Róisín Culligan at William Fry.

  • Independent Regulator Could Chip Away At FIFA Autonomy

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    After the U.K.'s recent proposal for an independent football regulator, FIFA's commitment to safeguarding football association autonomy remains unwavering, despite a history of complexities arising from controversies in the bidding and hosting of major tournaments, say Yasin Patel at Church Court Chambers and Caitlin Haberlin-Chambers at SLAM Global.

  • A Look At The Latest EU Alternative Investment Regulation

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    Recent amendments to the EU Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive governing a range of alternative investment funds reflect a growing regulatory focus on nonbanking financial institutions, which expand credit to support economic growth but carry a commensurate risk, say Juliette Mills and Alix Prentice at Cadwalader.

  • Unpacking The Law Commission's Digital Assets Consultation

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    The Law Commission recently published a consultation on recognizing a third personal property category to accommodate the development of digital assets, highlighting difficulties with current models of property rights and the potential consequences of considering digital assets as personal property, say Andrew Tsang and Tom Bacon at BCLP.

  • Unpacking The FCA's Approach To AML Compliance Failures

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    In light of the upward trend of skilled-person reviews by the Financial Conduct Authority, including the latest investigation into Lloyds' anti-money laundering controls, financial firms should familiarize themselves with the mechanisms of FCA supervision and enforcement investigations, says Kathryn Westmore at RUSI.

  • New Russia Sanctions Reveal Int'l Enforcement Capabilities

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    Significant new U.K., U.S. and EU sanctions imposed on Russia notably target Europe-based individuals and entities accused of sanctions evasion, and with an apparent political will to enhance capabilities, the rhetoric is translating into international enforcement activity, say lawyers at Cadwalader.

  • Legal Sector Will Benefit From New Data Security Standard

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    The U.K. Information Commissioner's Office-approved new privacy certification scheme for the legal profession will inevitably become the default for law firms, chambers and vendors to prove their U.K. General Data Protection Regulation compliance, says Orlagh Kelly at Briefed.

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