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Pulse UK
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April 14, 2026
Eversheds Sutherland Elevates 25 To Partnership
Eversheds Sutherland International announced Tuesday that it is promoting 25 lawyers to its partnership in 2026, fairly matching the roughly two dozen lawyers who moved up to partner posts a year earlier, though fewer women made the grade.
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April 14, 2026
LSB To Overhaul Regulator Oversight With New Directorate
The Legal Services Board said Tuesday that it plans to establish a new "directorate" to strengthen its oversight of legal services regulators, amid a government review of its own work in the aftermath of failures of big law firms like SSB Group Ltd. and Axiom Ince Ltd.
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April 14, 2026
Legal App Co-Founders Can't Duck £920K Loan Demand
The co-founders of a defunct online legal adviser failed to block a creditor's demand for a £920,000 ($1.25 million) loan repayment, as a London court on Tuesday rejected their "vague and unparticularized" claim that the debt would be converted into an investment in their company.
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April 14, 2026
Latham's London Revenue Passes $1B For First Time
Latham & Watkins LLP said Tuesday that its revenue climbed almost 19% over the past year to reach $8.3 billion, citing its London office as a crucial factor in the growth.
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April 14, 2026
Ex-Unite Legal Boss Widens Appeal Of Fraud Probe Sanction
Unite the Union's former legal chief won permission on Tuesday to expand his appeal against his failed claim that he was unfairly disciplined and forced to quit amid suspicion he was involved in bribery, money laundering and fraud at the trade union.
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April 14, 2026
FCA Bans Motor Finance Ads Misusing Martin Lewis Clips
The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it has banned advertisements from a claims management company for using its logo without permission and unauthorized clips of the founder of MoneySavingExpert to make "misleading claims about average motor finance compensation."
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April 14, 2026
Gov't Trials AI Pilot To Cut Court Transcript Costs
The Ministry of Justice has launched a study to test whether its in-house artificial intelligence tool can accurately transcribe court hearings, a move officials say could cut costs and expand access to records.
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April 14, 2026
Ex-Leigh Day Pro Accused Of Faking Letter To Hide Error
The Solicitors Regulation Authority told a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday that a former Leigh Day lawyer tried to cover up missing a disclosure deadline by claiming he had written and sent a disclosure letter when he had not.
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April 14, 2026
Lawyer To Face Tribunal Over Alleged Antisemitic Posts
A solicitor accused of posting antisemitic content on social media for almost a decade has been referred to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal for prosecution.
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April 14, 2026
Milbank's London Revenue Climbs 11% To $366M In 2025
Milbank LLP said Tuesday that revenue in its London office rose by more than 11% to exceed $360 million, as the firm continues to grow in the English capital.
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April 13, 2026
Sidley Posts More Than 30% Surge In London Revenue
Sidley Austin LLP said on Monday that revenue from its London office increased by more than 30% to almost $300 million in its most recent financial year, as the firm continues to tap rivals for talent.
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April 13, 2026
RPC To Depart Tower Bridge For New London HQ
Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP said Monday that it will relocate to new headquarters in London, ending a 20-year tenure at Tower Bridge.
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April 13, 2026
Brandsmiths Acquires Specialist IP Firm Sipara
Trademark boutique Brandsmiths bolstered its prosecution practice on Monday with the acquisition of U.K. intellectual property firm Sipara.
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April 13, 2026
Law Society Sets Limits On Non-Solicitors After Mazur Ruling
The Law Society said Monday that non-solicitors can carry out litigation tasks under supervision, provided an authorized lawyer remains responsible, issuing its first practical guidance after the Court of Appeal's landmark ruling in Mazur.
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April 13, 2026
'Turn The Rights Act Into KPIs': Tips For In-House Counsel
The Employment Rights Act raises the financial and reputational risk of violations of employment law. Here, Andre Wolff and Laura Lescott, lawyers for global technology firm Infosys and members of the Association of Corporate Counsel, talk about how in-house teams can make compliance with the legislation a commercial priority.
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April 13, 2026
Partners Vote To Approve Perkins Coie–Ashurst Merger
Perkins Coie and Ashurst said on Monday that the partners at both their firms had voted "overwhelmingly" in favor of a merger, paving the way for a new transatlantic firm with revenue of around $2.8 billion.
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April 13, 2026
Simmons Takes On First Roster For AI Law Internship
Simmons & Simmons LLP said Monday that it has taken on its first round of eight students for a new artificial intelligence law internship that is aimed at blending legal and technical training to help better equip future lawyers on the emerging technology.
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April 13, 2026
Irwin Mitchell Names 6 New Equity Partners
Irwin Mitchell named its head of commercial dispute resolution on Monday as one of six lawyers that it has promoted to become full equity partners at the firm.
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April 10, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
The past week in London has seen the owner of an oil tanker stuck in the Strait of Hormuz sued by an energy company and an insurer, law firm Boodle Hatfield LLP and two Serle Court barristers sued by a group of Winston Churchill's great-grandchildren, and Welsh Water hit with a fresh class action over polluted rivers.
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April 10, 2026
Female Pupils Less Positive Than Men About Bar Prospects
Female aspiring barristers are significantly less optimistic about their career prospects than their male counterparts, with concerns about work-life balance driving much of that negative outlook, according to a survey released by the Bar Council on Friday.
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April 10, 2026
Legal AI Biz Orbital Launches Its Own Conveyancing Firm
Legal technology business Orbital has announced the launch of a residential conveyancing firm that will deploy its own artificial intelligence software at the coalface after several years providing the tech to other firms.
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April 10, 2026
Law Firm Can't Cut Fine Over Client Account AML Failures
A disciplinary tribunal has upheld a fine of £68,000 ($91,400) for anti-money laundering failures against a law firm that used its client bank account to move $23 million for a Russian customer, concluding that the penalty fell within the range of possible sanctions.
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April 10, 2026
London Firm Gets £35K Costs Bill Over Accounting Breaches
A London law firm that improperly retained a client's funds has been slapped with a bill of £35,000 (£47,000) for the Solicitor Regulation Authority's costs after a tribunal fined it just £2,500.
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April 09, 2026
HFW Launches Paris Restructuring Practice With New Partner
Holman Fenwick Willan LLP said Friday it has launched a bankruptcy, insolvency and restructuring practice in Paris, adding a new partner from French firm Franklin to kickstart the new unit.
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April 09, 2026
Akin Tech Head Departs To Launch Business Advice Co.
Akin's head of international technology has left the firm less than two years after joining to launch his own consultancy to offer businesses commercial and transactional advice.
AI Startup Legora Aims To Reshape Law Firm-Client Dynamics
In-house lawyers might send an email or get on the phone when they want to talk to outside counsel. But the head of artificial intelligence startup Legora tells Law360 he sees a future where a client's first port of call might be an artificial intelligence tool offered by a law firm.
Judge's Case To Shine Light On Secretive Selection Process
A judge's challenge on Wednesday to the lawfulness of a secretive process used to appoint judges will shine a light on part of the U.K. legal system that is often criticized but largely opaque.
Incoming Law Society Leader Has Her Eye On Modernization
When Dana Denis-Smith launched her campaign to become president of the Law Society of England and Wales, her message was clear: the legal profession has changed dramatically over the past two decades — and must keep evolving.
AI-Driven Fake Evidence Could 'Play Havoc' In Legal Disputes
A recent High Court judgment exposed how nonexistent artificial intelligence-generated citations had been used in legal arguments — but experts say this could be the tip of the iceberg for increasingly sophisticated fake evidence making its way into disputes.
Editor's Picks
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The Revolving Door: Taylor Wessing Pro Moves Before Merger
Over the past week, White & Case lost a senior private equity partner to Ashurst, Eversheds Sutherland strengthened its global finance practice with a Reed Smith addition, and Shoosmiths recruited an IP partner from Taylor Wessing a month before its merger with Winston & Strawn.
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The Revolving Door: Dentons, Willkie Pick Up Kirkland Pros
Over the past week, White & Case lost its third finance partner to Cahill in two months, Dentons and Willkie picked up corporate partners from Kirkland, and Sidley Austin recruited two restructuring heads for its growing financial practice.
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The Revolving Door: Sullivan & Cromwell Bags Finance Head
Over the past week, the head of Allen Overy Shearman Sterling's financial services group joined Sullivan & Cromwell, Baker McKenzie swiped an investment funds specialist from Latham & Watkins, and a cyber heavyweight exited Deloitte Legal for Reynolds Porter Chamberlain.
Expert Analysis
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Series
Practice Leader Insights From CRS' Sarah Wigington
Sarah Wigington, head of CRS' U.K. corporate team, discusses the challenges of conducting a joint venture with numerous moving parts that had to land at precisely the same moment, how simplification of corporate reporting and disclosure obligations would help midmarket businesses, and why ESG factors are now a threshold issue.
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PE's Path In UK Legal Market Offers Playbook For US Firms
The U.K. offers 14 years' worth of data on private equity's involvement in the legal market, demonstrating for U.S. firms what worked, what didn’t and why, and illustrating several lessons about operational readiness, cultural fit and timing, says Tom Lenfestey at The Law Practice Exchange.
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Lack Of Associate Pay Progression May Leave Firms Exposed
Willkie’s recent salary increases for newly qualified lawyers in London made headline news, but the more important issue is how firms pay midlevel associates, since allowing pay progression to lag materially risks undermining the cohort firms rely on to sustain client relationships and train the next generation, says Adam Stocker at Major Lindsey.
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Practice Leader Insights From Wedlake Bell's Adam Grant
Adam Grant, head of employment at Wedlake Bell, discusses the challenges of persuading a business to offer employees greater support when it makes large-scale redundancies, the need for new guidance on returning data subject access requests to their intended purpose, and how economic uncertainty with less job security may lead to more office presence.
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Practice Leader Insights From Willkie's Gavin Gordon
Willkie's chair of European private equity, Gavin Gordon, discusses the challenges of conducting a merger across differing time zones and in a complex regulatory environment, how clients are frustrated by the growing impact of antitrust filings, and why there is a mismatch on valuation expectation between buyers and sellers.
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Practice Leader Insights From CRS' Dewdney Drew
Dewdney Drew, head of brand protection at Charles Russell Speechlys, discusses the challenges of working on a firm's rebrand under time pressure, how the process to simplify U.K. design protection is under way, and why lawyers need to harness the power of artificial intelligence.
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What UK, EU Law Firms Can Do To Rectify Gender Inequality
The latest figures show that elite international law firms remain among the weakest performers on gender equality in the legal industry, demonstrating that equity is no longer external to the practice of law, and sits within the core responsibilities of those who steward trust in courts and governments, says Govindi Deerasinghe at Global 50/50.
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Practice Leader Insights From Jones Day's Vica Irani
Vica Irani, co-leader of Jones Day's corporate practice, discusses the challenges of assisting a multinational client with divesting its Russian operations at the onset of the Russia-Ukraine war, why greater harmonization across borders would be beneficial, and the increase in regulatory scrutiny for deals in terms of antitrust and foreign direct investment screening.
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Why SRA Is Cracking Down On 'No Win, No Fee' Law Firms
Harriet Gamper at the Solicitors Regulation Authority discusses the regulator’s recent warning notice concerning "no win, no fee" arrangements in high-volume consumer claims, aimed at offering lawyers clarity in understanding their obligations following findings that many law firms were failing in their duty to protect clients' best interests.
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Why UK Criminal Court Changes Need To Be Systemic
The proposals in the second part of Brian Leveson's long-anticipated independent review of criminal courts, aimed at easing pressure on the criminal justice system and restoring public confidence, are broadly welcomed, but without structural change and sustained funding, they risk becoming little more than temporary fixes, says Vicky Lankester at Brett Wilson.
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Practice Leader Insights From Stewarts' Aaron Le Marquer
Aaron Le Marquer, Stewarts' head of insurance, discusses the challenges of conducting defamation proceedings in Thailand, why the minimal impact of the Insurance Act 2015 is disappointing, and how working in diverse environments provides a more holistic understanding of the way insurance works.
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Practice Leader Insights From Skadden's Deborah Kirk
Deborah Kirk, Skadden's head of intellectual property and technology, discusses the challenges of cross-disciplinary collaboration on a transaction, how the proliferation of artificial intelligence is forcing clients to rethink their IP and data strategies, and why flexibility, curiosity and dynamism are key as a lawyer.
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Practice Leader Insights From Stewarts' Joseph Lappin
Joseph Lappin, head of employment at Stewarts, discusses the challenges of representing barristers with very high IQs, how the employment tribunal system is crying out for proper investment, and the Financial Conduct Authority's inconsistent approach to nonfinancial misconduct.
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Practice Leader Insights From Jones Day's Anna Cartwright
Anna Cartwright, co-head of Jones Day's real estate practice, discusses the challenges of working on a transaction requiring regulatory expertise from multiple regions, why new regulatory complexities in the real assets sector can introduce risks for clients, and how the convergence of real estate and infrastructure is playing out in asset managers' investment decisions.
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Practice Leader Insights: Kingsley Napley's Corinne Aldridge
Corinne Aldridge, head of employment at Kingsley Napley, discusses the challenges of leading a transaction requiring local employment law advice from multiple jurisdictions, how the perception of workplace conduct has changed dramatically in recent years, and why people skills and empathy are key in her field.