Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • February 12, 2026

    Gov't Sets Out Tough Regime For Appointed Representatives

    The U.K. government published on Thursday its detailed proposed changes to the appointed representatives regime, which will give the Financial Conduct Authority new powers to crack down on misconduct.

  • February 12, 2026

    Broker Says Denmark Can't Bring £56M Cum-Ex Fraud Claim

    An English broker told Britain's top court on Thursday that Denmark's tax authority can't sue it for more than £56 million ($76 million) over a tax refund fraud, because an earlier decision in related proceedings rendered the claim inadmissible.

  • February 12, 2026

    Ex-Police Treasurer Convicted Of £13K Expenses Fraud

    A former police officer has been convicted of 15 counts of fraud by abuse of position in which he dipped into about £13,500 ($18,500) in the petty cash of a staff association for police constables to fund his family holidays.

  • February 12, 2026

    SFO To Revisit 20 Cases After Bribery Prosecution Implodes

    The Serious Fraud Office said Thursday that it is reexamining the integrity of approximately 20 cases after it abandoned a decade-old bribery prosecution because of another failing in disclosure. 

  • February 11, 2026

    Outdated Laws Blamed For China Spy Case Collapse

    The root cause of the collapse of criminal proceedings against two men accused of spying for China was outdated legislation, but the risk of future problems has not been entirely negated by a new national security law, a parliamentary committee warned Thursday.

  • February 11, 2026

    Compliance Pro Wins Bias Case Over Lost Promotion

    A veteran compliance expert has persuaded an employment tribunal that she was forced to quit working at a car dealership because bosses had unfairly passed her over for a promotion to a new head role and given the job to a man. 

  • February 11, 2026

    Denmark Says Cum-Ex Ruling No Bar To £56M Fraud Claim

    Denmark told Britain's top court on Wednesday that it should be allowed to sue an English brokerage for £56 million ($76 million) over a tax refund fraud, arguing that an earlier decision barring linked allegations was based on "fundamentally different" facts.

  • February 11, 2026

    Bank Of Africa UK Avoids Liability For Whistleblower's Firing

    The U.K. arm of Bank of Africa should not have been held liable for its chief executive's decision to fire a whistleblowing human resources executive, a London appeals tribunal ruled on Wednesday.

  • February 11, 2026

    Transneft CEO's Daughter Wins EU Sanctions Appeal

    A European Union court lifted sanctions on Wednesday against the daughter of the chief executive of a Russian state-controlled oil and gas company, finding that the bloc's council had failed to produce fresh evidence for reimposing the restrictions.

  • February 11, 2026

    PwC Settles Assistant's Age Discrimination Claim For £150K

    PwC has paid £150,000 ($205,000) to settle an age and disability discrimination claim from a former employee of more than 40 years, the equality watchdog for Northern Ireland has revealed.

  • February 11, 2026

    VTB Fights To Lift Block On Russian Case Over Frozen $156M

    VTB Bank asked a London appeals court on Wednesday to lift an injunction that blocks it from bringing a $156 million case in Russia over frozen funds, arguing a judge wrongly concluded that its claim was "vexatious and oppressive."

  • February 10, 2026

    FCA To Regulate 'Buy Now, Pay Later' For Consumer Safety

    The Financial Conduct Authority will require lenders to conduct affordability checks and give consumers clearer information before they borrow under deferred payment plans, Britain's financial watchdog said Wednesday as it moves to regulate the rapidly growing "buy now, pay later" sector.

  • 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.

Expert Analysis

  • What EBA Report Means For Non-EU Financial Firms

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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

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    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.

  • Cos. Must Take Action As Corporate Enforcement Evolves

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    The Serious Fraud Office's renewed vigor toward proactive corporate enforcement, as evidenced by its recently affirmed commitment to collaboration with the U.S. on cross-border investigations, means that organizations must solidify their antibribery and corruption frameworks to remain ahead of fast-moving regulatory and legislative initiatives, say lawyers at Weil.

  • UK Reforms Investment Rules, But Clarity Concerns Remain

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    The U.K. government’s recent reforms to the National Security and Investment Act 2021 demonstrate a continuing pragmatic approach by requiring fewer deal filings, but the regime would benefit from more clarity in key areas, say lawyers at McDermott.

  • Fraud Law Puts Fund Managers Under Compliance Spotlight

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    The new failure to prevent fraud offense, effective Sept. 1, may not represent a material departure from most managers’ duties to exercise due care in preventing loss to the assets they manage, but the prospect of criminal liability should sharpen their compliance focus, says Andrew Henderson at Goodwin Procter.

  • CMA Pricing Guide Signals Shift In UK Consumer Protection

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    The Competition and Markets Authority’s recent draft price transparency guide, as part of a wider reform introduced by the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024, represents a significant change in U.K. consumer protection by targeting unfair trading practices and strengthening enforcement mechanisms, says Felicity Forward at Shoosmiths.

  • 8 Compliance Team Strategies To Support Business Agility

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    Amid new regulatory requirements across the globe, compliance functions must design thoughtful guardrails that help business leaders achieve their commercial objectives lawfully — from repurposing existing tools to using technology thoughtfully — instead of defaulting to cumbersome protocols that hinder legitimate business, says Theodore Edelman at GCE Advisors.

  • What To Note From FCA, Gov't Financial Growth Proposals

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    Recent Financial Conduct Authority and government proposals for financial services reform are positive developments for firms, signaling a drive to push forward growth and a willingness to be flexible in areas of regulation that the industry has long raised as barriers, say lawyers at Simmons & Simmons.

  • How Accessibility Act Is Reshaping EU Digital Compliance

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    In adding binding requirements to digital spaces, the recently enacted European Accessibility Act aims to harmonize rules and promote digital inclusion across the EU, a departure from earlier frameworks that relied on voluntary standards for businesses, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.

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