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Employment UK
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December 22, 2025
Charity Must Pay £76K To CEO Fired Amid Theft Allegations
A tribunal has ordered a London charity to pay its former chief executive £76,200 ($103,000) after it unfairly sacked him based on the false premise that he'd stolen money from its coffers for several years.
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December 22, 2025
Global Software Firm Overturns Redundancy Violations Ruling
A global software firm has a second shot at fighting off unfair dismissal claims from a staffer who it made redundant, after an appellate tribunal held that the first judge had erroneously applied an objective test when considering if bosses had "contemplated" dismissals.
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December 22, 2025
Skadden Guides Miami Insurer On Buy Of £5B Utmost Unit
Miami-based JAB Insurance said Monday it will buy the £5 billion ($6.7 billion) bulk purchase annuity business of U.K. insurer Utmost Group PLC, in a transaction guided by Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom and King & Spalding.
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December 22, 2025
FCA Strips Regulatory Permissions From Pensions Adviser
The Financial Conduct Authority has slapped a pension adviser with a ban on carrying out regulated activity after a series of breaches, including a failure to pay off an arbitration award.
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December 19, 2025
Yodel Wins Share Dispute With Ex-Director Over Forged Docs
Delivery company Yodel defeated a claim alleging it owed a controlling stake in it to two companies controlled by its former owner, as a London judge ruled Friday that he had probably created false share warrant documents to support the claim.
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December 19, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen the designer of an 88-facet diamond bring a copyright claim against a luxury watch retailer, collapsed firm Axiom Ince bring legal action against the solicitors' watchdog, and the Post Office hit with compensation claims from two former branch managers over their wrongful convictions during the Horizon information technology scandal.
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December 19, 2025
Canada Life Pens £189M Pension Deal With Healthcare Co.
Insurer Canada Life on Friday said it has taken on £189 million ($252.5 million) in retirement liabilities from an unnamed pension scheme in the healthcare sector, in a deal guided by Stephenson Harwood and Baker McKenzie.
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December 19, 2025
Watchdog Floats Rules For New Collective Pension Plans
Britain's retirement savings watchdog floated proposals on Friday that are designed to help more businesses join new collective pension plans, broadening the scope of existing rules and allowing more workers to access "lower risk" and "better outcome pensions."
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December 19, 2025
Actors Vote To Refuse Image, Voice Scans Over AI Fears
Film and television performers in the U.K. have voted to refuse to have digital scans on set in a bid to stop their voices and likenesses being replicated through artificial intelligence.
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December 19, 2025
JD Sports Settles Sexual Harassment Claim For £65K
High Street giant JD Sports has agreed to pay £65,000 ($87,000) to a former sales assistant who was slapped on the bottom by her male supervisor.
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December 18, 2025
CMS Steers PIC On £230M Port Co. Pension Deal
Pension Insurance Corp. said Thursday that it has completed a £230 million ($308 million) pension deal with Peel Ports Group Ltd. in a deal guided by CMS and Gowling WLG.
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December 18, 2025
Gov't Freezes UK Pension Enrollment Salary Thresholds
The government decided on Thursday against changing the salary threshold at which employers must automatically enroll their staff into a workplace pension, despite growing suggestions that removing the limit could help mitigate the looming savings crisis.
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December 18, 2025
Employers Urged To Act Fast As Overhaul Gets Final OK
Lawyers urged employers to act swiftly and called for "clarity and investment" on Thursday as the government's Employment Rights Bill finally gained royal assent and became law.
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December 18, 2025
Third Case Over Gender-Critical Gov't Network Trimmed
An employment tribunal has dismissed claims against several governmental departments and the co-chair of a staff network because the colleagues who allegedly discriminated against her with their gender-critical beliefs that sex is binary were not employees of those bodies.
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December 18, 2025
Debevoise, Eversheds Lead £525M Pension Deal For Skanska
The U.K. subsidiary of Swedish builder Skanska AB said Thursday that it has transferred £525 million ($705 million) of its pension commitments in Britain to Standard Life in a buy-in transaction, which secures the retirement savings of about 5,500 members.
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December 18, 2025
Gender-Critical Barrister Loses Stonewall Appeal Over Probe
Barrister Allison Bailey has lost her appeal to hold Stonewall liable for a discriminatory probe into her online activity as a court ruled Thursday that a complaint by an employee at the LGBT+ charity about her gender-critical tweets was not the cause of her mistreatment.
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December 17, 2025
Former Postmistresses Sue Post Office Over IT Scandal
Two former subpostmistresses have sued the Post Office Ltd. for compensation over their wrongful convictions during the Horizon information technology scandal.
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December 17, 2025
Ex-Reed Smith Pro Struck Off For Faking Cancer Diagnosis
A former Reed Smith LLP associate was struck off on Wednesday after he admitted that he lied about being diagnosed with cancer and gave a forged doctor's report to the firm to back up his false claim.
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December 17, 2025
Police Officers Seek Review Of Union Membership Ban
Two serving officers have said legislation banning police from belonging to any trade union is incompatible with human rights law and have asked a court to overturn the provision, Leigh Day said Wednesday.
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December 17, 2025
Freemasons Fight Inclusion In Met Police Vetting List
England's Freemasons are challenging a requirement for officers and staff of London's Metropolitan Police to declare their association with the fraternity as "unlawful, unfair and discriminatory."
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December 17, 2025
Worker Loses Case Sexual Comments Were Harassment
An account manager for a vehicle recovery company who was discriminated against by her boss lost her case Wednesday that she was also subjected to sexual harassment, as an appellate tribunal ruled she was not offended by vulgar remarks made by her colleagues.
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December 17, 2025
Womble Bond Steers £107M Pension Deal For Co-Op
British insurance company Rothesay Life has completed a £107 million ($143 million) pension deal for Lincolnshire Co-operative Ltd., guided by Womble Bond Dickinson.
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December 17, 2025
Trading Co. Accuses Ex-Execs Of $21M Client, Employee Theft
An online trading company has accused its ex-global head of human resources and two other executives of costing it $21 million by poaching clients and staff, as well as handing confidential information to competitors.
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December 17, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Reveals Shrinking Defined Benefit Market
The number of lucrative final salary-type retirement savings plans has dropped by nearly a third over the past 13 years, according to data from The Pensions Regulator.
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December 17, 2025
'Alarm Bells Ringing' Over Employment Bill Enforcement
Employment lawyers are bracing for impact as the government's workers' rights reform package nears royal assent on Thursday, with no clear answers about how employees can have their new rights enforced when tribunal claims take years to be heard.
Expert Analysis
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Spotlight On UK's Changing Employment Laws
The U.K. government recently announced that it is consulting on proposals, which, if implemented, will have a significant impact on the U.K. workplace and employment litigation. With these, plus other ongoing bills, proposals, reviews and consultations, it appears that employer-friendly legislation is on the horizon for 2013, says Suzanne Horne of Paul Hastings LLP.
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Determining Whose Laws Protect Border-Crossing Employees
Probably the most common question in international employment law practice is, "which countries’ employment laws protect border-crossing employees such as expatriates and mobile workers?" This question is relevant when arranging any mobile job, expatriate posting or “secondment,” and it becomes vital when a multinational needs to dismiss border‑crossing staff, says Donald Dowling or White & case LLP
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UK Reforms: A New Era In Criminal Cartel Enforcement?
A law before U.K. Parliament, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill, aims to achieve "strong, sustainable and balanced growth" through wide-ranging measures that seek to improve several areas of the law. In particular, the proposed competition law reforms represent a major re-casting of the U.K. regime, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP.
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Recent Developments In German Competition Law
The first half of 2012 saw again significant enforcement activity at the German Federal Cartel Office. The authority prohibited two mergers, imposed fines on three cartels, installed an anonymous whistleblower system, and started the second phase of its food sector inquiry, say Silvio Cappellari and Maria Held of Arnold & Porter LLP.
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Weighing UK Pensions Regulator's Moral Hazard Powers
The question of whether the U.K. Pension Regulator's moral hazard powers are enforceable outside the U.K. arose first in the Sea Containers case in 2008 and, more recently, in the cases of the Nortel Networks’ U.K. DB Scheme and the Great Lakes DB Scheme. The differing approach of the Pension Regulator, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and the Canadian courts in each of these cases is noteworthy, say Sian Robertson of Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP and David Cleary of Greenberg Traurig LLP.
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Extra-Territorial Application Of The Automatic Stay
A recent decision in the Nortel Networks Chapter 11 proceedings demonstrates the difficulty of an expansive approach to U.S. bankruptcy court jurisdiction and calls into question the ability of claimholders to participate in statutorily mandated foreign proceedings without risking loss of their claims and potential sanctions in the U.S. bankruptcy court, say Steven R. Gross, Katherine Ashton and Shannon Rebholz of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.
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Effective Management Of UK Employee Exits
This article aims to explain in general terms the protections that apply to employees in the United Kingdom and the choices available to an employer in relation to possible employee terminations — along with the relative risk and costs when deciding how to terminate, says Bettina Bender of CM Murray LLP.
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Trends For Encouraging Employee Whistleblowing
There appears to be little doubt that there is an emerging international consensus that whistleblowing is a legitimate tool for dealing with economic fraud and should be encouraged as one way of stemming such wrongdoing, say Eric A. Savage and Anita S. Vadgama of Littler Mendelson PC.
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U.S. Incentives, EU Employees And Conflicts Of Law
U.S. employers frequently offer senior employees who are based overseas the opportunity to participate in incentive and bonus arrangements that contain provisions protecting the employer’s interests. Any doubt concerning the enforceability of such provisions in the EU now appears to have been resolved in the employees’ favor, say Christopher K. Walter and Mark M. Poerio of Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker LLP.