Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • January 12, 2026

    FCA Warns Wealth Managers Sell ETPs To Wrong Consumers

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday that investment businesses are failing to test consumers' knowledge adequately before selling them complex exchange-traded products without advice.

  • January 12, 2026

    Briton Faces South Africa Extradition In £36M Bribery Case

    A London judge on Monday ordered on Monday the extradition of a British businessman to South Africa, where he faces charges in connection with an alleged £36 million ($48.5 million) government bribery scandal.

  • January 12, 2026

    Petrol Station Duo Faked Employment In Transfer Spat

    A London employment tribunal has struck out contract transfer claims brought by two alleged petrol station employees after finding they deliberately fabricated payslips and employment contracts to support their case.

  • January 12, 2026

    UK Pays Settlement To Tortured Guantánamo Bay Detainee

    The government has reached settlement in a legal fight with a Guantánamo Bay detainee, two years after the U.K. Supreme Court said he should be able to bring a personal injury claim in England over his torture.

  • January 09, 2026

    SEC's 'Hack-To-Trade' Suit Was Unfairly Served, UK Man Says

    An accused hacker in the U.K. seeks to shed U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission allegations he made $3.75 million trading on nonpublic information he improperly gained access to, arguing he'd been unfairly served in prison.

  • January 09, 2026

    Ex-Director Ordered To Pay £265K Over P2P Lender Fraud

    A London judge ordered a former director of a peer-to-peer lender to pay £265,000 ($355,000) on Friday following the businessman's conviction for defrauding investors after the scheme failed. 

  • January 09, 2026

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

    This past week in London has seen a collapsed investment firm revive a $15 million dispute with a hedge fund, major Hollywood studios bring an IP claim against the U.K.'s largest internet providers over illegal streaming, and the Department of Health and Social Care sue the law firm and barrister representing it in a pharma competition damages case.

  • January 09, 2026

    Charity Watchdog Probes City And Guilds' Business Arm Sale

    England and Wales' charity regulator revealed Friday that it has opened a statutory inquiry into the City and Guilds of London Institute, examining the educational organization's estimated approximately £180 million ($242 million) sale of its awards businesses over concerns related to executives' bonuses.

  • January 09, 2026

    Barrister Disbarred Over LLM Dissertation Plagiarism

    A barrister who was recently called was disbarred by a London legal disciplinary tribunal panel Friday after it found that he had copied another student's work and submitted it for his law master's degree dissertation.

  • January 09, 2026

    No Relief For Ex-Tech Officer's Unclear Whistleblowing Claims

    A tribunal has refused interim relief for a former chief technology officer who claims that RedCloud Technologies Ltd. fired him for blowing the whistle on a data security flaw, finding it more likely that he was dismissed for other reasons.

  • January 08, 2026

    Weyerhaeuser Says $1.5B Pension Move Didn't Harm Retirees

    Lawyers for timber producer Weyerhaeuser and State Street Global Advisors urged a Washington federal judge at a hearing Thursday to throw out a proposed class action from retired workers over Weyerhaeuser's transfer of $1.5 billion in pension obligations to a private equity-backed insurance company, arguing that the retirees have failed to establish the deal actually harmed them.

  • January 08, 2026

    HSBC To Pay €300M To Settle French Tax Fraud Probe

    HSBC has agreed to pay French authorities more than €300 million ($350 million) in fines and unpaid taxes to settle a criminal probe into how the bank's Paris branch handled dividend arbitrage transactions between 2014 and 2019, public prosecutors revealed Thursday.

  • January 08, 2026

    SRA Investigates Lawyer Over Threats To Leaseholders

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Thursday it is investigating a London lawyer accused of bullying and threatening leaseholders into buying freeholds from him at inflated prices.

  • January 08, 2026

    McDonald's Work Harassment Claims Under UK Gov't Review

    The government has said it will further examine allegations by a group of trade unions and a campaigning organization that McDonald's has failed to appropriately address gender-based violence and harassment in its restaurants and franchises.

  • January 08, 2026

    Ex-Seafood Bosses Deny Stealing £1.2M For Luxury Lifestyle

    Former bosses of a seafood business have denied misappropriating £1.2 million ($1.6 million) to fund a lavish lifestyle that included luxury cars and extravagant holidays, claiming the expenses were approved business spending to make the company look successful.

  • January 08, 2026

    Solicitor Accused Of Misleading Court In Personal Injury Case

    A solicitor faces being prosecuted before a tribunal over allegations that she made a series of misleading statements to the court and defense counsel when she represented a client in a personal injury matter, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said.

  • January 08, 2026

    SFO Uses Novel Approach To Return £400K To Fraud Victims

    The Serious Fraud Office said Thursday it will return £400,000 ($537,000) to people who were defrauded by a Lebanese financier more than two decades ago after using a novel legal strategy to claw back the money.

  • January 07, 2026

    Sprenger Follows The Puck To New Boutique Dream Team

    White collar veteran Polly Sprenger explained her decision to join the new London office of U.S. firm Michelman & Robinson with Wayne Gretzky's famed follow-the-puck mantra. Here she talks to Law360 about seeking out a different way of working, what clients actually need and why she thinks good lawyers should reveal rather than conceal the truth.

  • January 07, 2026

    Aircraft Co. Settles $44M Claim Over Plane Stranded In Russia

    An aircraft leasing company and two others have reached a settlement with a dozen reinsurers that they claimed should cover for the $44 million loss of a plane leased to a Russian airline and stranded after the country's invasion of Ukraine.

  • January 07, 2026

    Solicitor Fined £40K For Misleading About Client's Cash

    A tribunal has fined a solicitor £40,000 ($54,000) after concluding that he made misleading comments about a client's money but cleared the lawyer of advising the client to fabricate a defense to bribery charges.

  • January 07, 2026

    Ex-Jefferies Banker To Face 2028 Trial For Insider Dealing

    A former Jefferies International adviser and his alleged associate denied committing insider dealing to make £70,000 ($94,000) from the £969 million takeover of a real estate investment trust when they appeared at a London court on Wednesday.

  • January 07, 2026

    2 Former Carillion Execs Fined Over Misleading Statements

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Wednesday that it has fined two former finance directors of international construction company Carillion PLC, which is in liquidation, for their part in its misleading statements to the markets.

  • January 06, 2026

    The Top Non-SFO Financial Crime Trials To Watch In 2026

    A major corruption trial against Nigeria's former oil minister, a tax fraud case against a prominent barrister and the prosecution of two men over a cyberattack on London's transport network are among the biggest white-collar cases in 2026 not brought by the Serious Fraud Office.

  • January 06, 2026

    Saudi Businessman Sues Ex-Partner In Property Deal Dispute

    A Saudi businessman has sued his former business partner in a London court over multiple alleged failures to return funds provided for real estate investments, alleging that he owes him more than 89 million riyals ($24 million).

  • January 06, 2026

    Barclays Settles $643K Fraud Detection Failure Claims

    Barclays Bank PLC has settled a $643,000 claim from a Singaporean fire safety company that alleged the bank negligently failed to prevent an elaborate fraud that duped the fire safety business into transferring funds to criminals.

Expert Analysis

  • How Lawyers Can Work On Unmasking Beneficial Ownership

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    The Solicitors Regulation Authority's recent anti-money laundering report suggests that identifying ultimate beneficial owners in a transaction is one of the key day-to-day challenges that law firms face, and the solution lies in combining know-your-business processes with know-your-client verification, says Sam Ruback at Thirdfort.

  • Anticipating The UK's Top M&A Trends In 2025

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    Conversations with market participants are focusing on five key questions about 2025's transactional markets, ranging from issues of artificial intelligence, to the boom in takeovers and increased regulatory scrutiny, says Layla D’Monte at King & Spalding.

  • Takeaways On Freezing Injunctions After Dos Santos Ruling

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in dos Santos v. Unitel moved the needle in favor of applicants for freezing injunctions in two ways, say lawyers at Cooke Young.

  • What To Know About New Art Market Reporting Obligations

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    Recent U.K. sanctions reporting obligations on art market participants and high value dealers come into effect in May 2025, and businesses should review risk assessments and compliance controls to identify areas that may require strengthening, say lawyers at Steptoe.

  • Businesses Should Expect A Role In Tackling Fraud Next Year

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    If one word sums up a key trend in financial crime enforcement in 2024, it would be fraud, as enforcement agencies clamped down on consumer-focused crime — and businesses will need to be prepared to play a part in 2025 with the coming of the "failure to prevent fraud" offense, says Jessica Parker at Corker Binning.

  • What FCA's 2024 Changes Suggest For Enforcement In 2025

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    Though the Financial Conduct Authority is likely to enter 2025 hungry for enforcement wins after fielding intense criticism in 2024 over proposed policy amendments, firms can glean ideas for mitigating their risk from heightened scrutiny by studying the regulator's changing behavior from the year just past, says Imogen Makin at WilmerHale.

  • How The Wirecard Judge Addressed Unreliability Of Memory

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    In a case brought by the administrator of Wirecard against Greybull Capital, High Court Judge Sara Cockerill took a multipronged and thoughtful approach to a common problem with fraudulent misrepresentation claims — how to assess the evidence of what was said at a meeting where recollections differ and where contemporaneous documentation is limited, says Andrew Head at Forsters.

  • Practical Considerations For Private Fund Side Letters

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    Side letters are a common way of formalizing negotiated arrangements between a private fund and a particular investor — and as the number and length of side letters per fundraise steadily climb, managers must consider the material legal risks carefully, say lawyers at Dechert.

  • Planning For UK And EU Crypto-Asset Regulations In 2025

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    Fims should expect to devote the rest of 2024 and much of 2025 to fine-tuning their compliance frameworks to align with European Union crypto-asset regulations taking effect soon and U.K. regulators' plans for updating their own crypto-asset regime in the coming year, says Steven Lightstone at Morgan Lewis.

  • What To Know About Plans For A UK Green Taxonomy

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    Rachel Richardson at Macfarlanes discusses the purpose of HM Treasury’s recent consultation on a U.K. green taxonomy, explains why the tool — which would define what economic activities support climate objectives — is necessary, and considers drafting challenges the U.K. government may face.

  • Key Takeaways From EU's Coming Digital Act

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    The European Union's impending Digital Operational Resilience Act will necessitate closer collaboration on resilience, risk management and compliance, and crucial challenges include ensuring IT third-party service providers meet the requirements on or before January 2025, says Susie MacKenzie at Coralytics.

  • Takeaways From EU's Draft AI Code Of Practice

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    The European Union AI Office’s recently published first draft of the General-Purpose AI Code of Practice sheds some welcome light on which Artificial Intelligence Act compliance issues the office finds particularly knotty and, importantly, acknowledges where further guidance will be necessary, say lawyers at Akin.

  • The Rising Tide Of EU Antitrust Enforcement In Pharma

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    The European Commission’s recent record-breaking €463 million fine of Teva for abusing its dominant position confirms that European Union competition law enforcement in the pharmaceutical sector remains a priority, with infringements drawing serious financial exposure, say lawyers at Cooley.

  • Looking Back On 2024's Competition Law Issues For GenAI

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    With inherent uncertainties in generative artificial intelligence raising antitrust issues that attract competition authorities' attention, the 2024 uptick in transaction reviews demonstrates that regulators are vigilant about the possibility that markets may tip in favor of large existing players, say lawyers at McDermott.

  • UK Bill Aims To Make Better Use Of Data Across Economy

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    The new Data Bill’s practical improvements to data schemes and certification systems will be welcomed by online service providers, but organizations need to consider the conditions and whether compliance will entail technical operational changes, say lawyers at Osborne Clarke.

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