Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • April 23, 2026

    BoE Pushes Banks To Combat Anthropic Mythos-Type AI Risk

    The Bank of England and UK Finance have warned banks and insurers to strengthen their cyber defenses by using artificial intelligence, in response to threats shown by emerging frontier AI models such as Anthropic's Mythos.

  • April 23, 2026

    Deripaska Sues Ex-Biz Partner Chernukhin In Ongoing Feud

    Oleg Deripaska has launched a new High Court claim against Vladimir Chernukhin, his former business partner, in the latest chapter of the long-running bitter legal feud between the two Russian oligarchs.

  • April 22, 2026

    Real Estate Co. Fights Exit Tax On £142M Over Legal Certainty

    A tribunal breached the principle of legal certainty in European Union law by ruling in favor of Britain's tax authority in a dispute over an exit tax on capital gains of £142 million ($192 million), a real estate investment company told a London court Wednesday.

  • April 22, 2026

    Class Rep Seeks To Revive £2.7B FX Claim As Opt-In Action

    A competition law consultant is fighting to relaunch a £2.7 billion ($3.65 billion) class action against major banks over alleged foreign exchange-rigging as an opt-in claim after a tribunal rejected it as an opt-out case.

  • April 22, 2026

    LC&F Solicitor Banned For Backdating Docs To Mislead FCA

    A solicitor found to have abetted a Ponzi scheme that siphoned off millions of pounds from British investors was banned from practicing on Wednesday after a disciplinary tribunal found that he had backdated documents to mislead auditors and regulators.

  • April 22, 2026

    FCA Leads 1st Raids On Illegal Crypto Traders

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Wednesday that it has led its first operation with other enforcement agencies to disrupt illegal peer-to-peer cryptocurrency trading in locations across London.

  • April 22, 2026

    Regulators Cut Burden On Senior Managers In Rule Changes

    The Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulatory Authority set out on Wednesday finalized reforms to the Senior Managers and Certification Regime that will reduce costs and increase flexibility for businesses.

  • April 22, 2026

    SFO Looks Toward Technology, AI Overhaul After Ephgrave

    The goal of the Serious Fraud Office to accelerate its investigations through intelligence-gathering and technology signals that the white-collar agency's new interim director will persist with plans put in place by predecessor Nick Ephgrave after his surprise exit earlier in April.

  • April 22, 2026

    FCA Faces Challenge Over Motor Finance Redress Formula

    A consumer organization said Wednesday that it will bring a legal challenge to review how the Financial Conduct Authority's £7.5 billion ($10 billion) motor finance redress system is calculated, the first time such a program has been tested.

  • April 22, 2026

    SFO Arrests 4 In Fraud Probe Into £4B Gov't Energy Scheme

    The Serious Fraud Office said it arrested four people on Wednesday in an investigation into a £4 billion ($5.4 billion) government-backed scheme designed to cut fuel poverty and slash carbon emissions.

  • April 21, 2026

    EU Adopts Anti-Corruption Law With 5% Turnover Fines

    The European Union gave the final go-ahead Tuesday to a new directive on combating corruption, with fines of up to 5% of world turnover or €40 million ($47 million), adding a potential aggravating factor if offenders are banks or law firms.

  • April 21, 2026

    SRA Fights Axiom Ince's £65M Fraud Oversight Claim

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority hit back at claims from the now-defunct Axiom Ince that it was negligent in failing to spot the firm's leaders' alleged misappropriation of £65 million ($87.7 million) in client money early on.

  • April 21, 2026

    SFO Commits To 'Business As Usual' Amid Director Change

    The top lawyer at the Serious Fraud Office signaled on Tuesday that it will be "business as usual" for enforcement despite the recent change in leadership at the white-collar agency — but disclosure remains its biggest challenge and must be improved.

  • April 21, 2026

    Payroll VAT Fraudsters Jailed For 22 Years

    Four directors of a payroll company were sentenced to more than 22 years in prison for a two-year £8.8 million ($11.9 million) value-added tax fraud scheme, HM Revenue and Customs said Tuesday.

  • April 21, 2026

    Ex-Oil Execs Say 'Dishonest' Asset Freeze Cost Them $1B

    Two former top executives at oil trader Arcadia told a court on Tuesday that a decadelong order freezing their assets in support of a meritless fraud claim prevented them from setting up a business that would have earned them more than $1.1 billion.

  • April 21, 2026

    FCA Picks 8 More Companies To Test AI On Customers

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it has chosen Barclays, Lloyds Banking Group's Scottish Widows, UBS and five other companies for a second round of live testing of artificial intelligence on real customers.

  • April 21, 2026

    SRA Finds Suspected Fraud In PM Law's £40M Shortfall

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Tuesday that it has uncovered a "sophisticated suspected fraud" at PM Law Ltd. involving £39.5 million ($53 million) in client funds allegedly removed and misused by the firm.

  • April 21, 2026

    ENRC's $290M Claim Defies Decades Of Precedent, SFO Says

    The Serious Fraud Office and Dechert argued at trial on Tuesday that the $290 million claim brought by ENRC over a botched criminal investigation flies in the face of 30 years of legal precedent and simply "doesn't work."

  • April 27, 2026

    The 2026 UK Lawyer Satisfaction Survey: Where Do You Stand?

    How is your work-life balance? Are you content with your compensation and opportunities for advancement at work? Take the 2026 Law360 UK Pulse Lawyer Satisfaction Survey and share your thoughts.

  • April 21, 2026

    Glencore Ruling Broadens Scope For Challenge Over Privilege

    A recent court ruling that expands legal advice privilege to cover some internal corporate communications gives companies greater scope for withholding sensitive material but is likely to prompt challenges over whether those documents meet the test for protection, lawyers say.

  • April 20, 2026

    UK Wine Fraudster Gets 10 Years For $97M Ponzi Scheme

    A Brooklyn federal judge on Monday sentenced a former executive of a U.K. wine company to 10 years in prison for his role in a $97 million Ponzi scheme that defrauded investors in loans that were falsely billed as being fully collateralized by high-value wine collections, calling it a "very brazen crime that led to mass amounts of theft."

  • April 20, 2026

    UK Co. Should Have Known About VAT Fraud, Tribunal Says

    A computer company should have known it was dealing with value-added tax fraudsters whose business was too good to be true, so HMRC's denial of a nearly £430,000 ($582,000) tax deduction is valid, the First-tier Tribunal said in a decision.

  • April 20, 2026

    SRA Fines 4 Firms Over Anti-Money Laundering Breaches

    The English solicitors watchdog has hit a law firm with an almost £14,000 ($19,000) penalty and fined three others £750 in the latest round of sanctions over anti-money laundering compliance failings.

  • April 20, 2026

    Solicitor Barred After Falsifying Time Sheets 

    An associate who falsified time records and billed clients for work he never completed has been struck off and ordered to pay £10,000 ($13,540), after admitting that he had created misleading billing entries for up to three years. 

  • April 20, 2026

    Reform UK Deputy Says His Co. May Have Made Tax Errors

    Reform UK deputy Richard Tice said "some errors" are inevitable when running multiple businesses following a report that his investment company failed to pay almost £100,000 ($135,000) in corporate tax, adding that he would pay up if it is found he owes more taxes.

Expert Analysis

  • What To Know About Interim Licenses In Global FRAND Cases

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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.

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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

    Author Photo

    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.

  • How Data Use Act Tightens Complaint Handling Procedures

    Author Photo

    Recently effective Data Use Act procedural requirements are coinciding with an artificial intelligence-driven increase in complaints from users about data subject access request responses, so organizations need to formalize their grievance process to prevent intervention by the Information Commissioner's Office and potential penalties, say lawyers at Womble Bond.

  • UK Supreme Court Dissent May Spark Sanctions Debate

    Author Photo

    While the recent U.K. Supreme Court's rejection of Eugene Shvidler’s appeal determined that sanctions decisions are primarily the government’s preserve, Justice Leggatt’s dissenting view that judges are better placed to assess proportionality will cause ripples and may mark a material shift in how future appeals are approached, say lawyers at Seladore.

Want to publish in Law360?


Submit an idea

Have a news tip?


Contact us here