Pulse UK

  • January 20, 2026

    Chubb Rejects Investor's Negligent Property Advice Claim

    Chubb has denied that it must pay out around £259,000 ($348,200) to cover a now-insolvent conveyancing firm accused of negligence by a Saudi investor, arguing the dissolved business acted within its legal remit during the purchase of student accommodation in the U.K.

  • January 20, 2026

    Osborne Clarke Pro Overturns SDT's Zahawi SLAPP Ruling

    An Osborne Clarke partner has overturned a disciplinary tribunal's finding of misconduct over his attempts to prevent a blogger from disclosing a defamation threat by former chancellor Nadhim Zahawi, as a London court found on Tuesday the decision lacked sufficient reasons and was "unfair."

  • January 19, 2026

    London Firm Fined £25K For AML Compliance Failures

    A London law firm has reached a deal to avoid enforcement action after the solicitors' regulator found that it had fallen short in meeting its legal obligations on anti-money laundering.

  • January 19, 2026

    UK Pensions Body Appoints 10 Law Firms For Legal Roster

    The U.K.'s government-backed pension protection body has appointed 10 law firms to provide legal services following a competitive procurement process.

  • January 19, 2026

    Pensions Provider TPT Picks New Chief Compliance Officer

    British pensions provider TPT Retirement Solutions said Monday that it has hired Helen Taylor as its new chief legal, risk and compliance officer.

  • January 19, 2026

    BHP To Pay £43M Over Mariana Dam Case As It Seeks Appeal

    BHP will have to pay £43 million ($58 million) of costs on account after it was found liable for the deadly collapse of a Brazilian dam, a London court ruled Monday as it rejected the mining giant's request to appeal against the decision.

  • January 26, 2026

    Ropes & Gray Launches Antitrust Practice In Milan

    Ropes & Gray LLP said Monday that it has launched an antitrust and foreign direct investment practice in Italy and has hired a counsel for its new office in Milan.

  • January 19, 2026

    Legal Aid Charity To Distribute £3.9M After Stagecoach Case

    A legal advice funding charity revealed Monday that it will issue £3.9 million ($5.2 million) in grants funded with an award from the U.K.'s competition court after the distribution of a rail operator's £25 million class action settlement.

  • January 19, 2026

    Law Firm Defends Advice On Home Loan That Soared To £11M

    A law firm has denied landing a homebuyer in debt of more than £11 million ($14.7 million) by failing to highlight the risks of using a bridging loan to finance a property deal worth £1.9 million, arguing at court that its advice was sound.

  • January 19, 2026

    Robert Reed To Retire As UK Supreme Court President

    Robert Reed is set to retire from the U.K.'s highest court after serving as a senior member of the judiciary for almost three decades.

  • January 16, 2026

    Judicial Watchdog Faces Court Challenge Over Bullying Claim

    The Judicial Conduct Investigations Office is set to face a court review over its failure to properly investigate Employment Judge Philip Lancaster, who has been accused by multiple women of bullying and other serious misconduct during hearings.

  • January 16, 2026

    Majority Of UK Law Trainees Are Absent From Firm Websites

    Almost three quarters of trainees at the U.K.'s top 50 law firms remain absent from their firms' websites, even as their names appear on client invoices and their billable hours underpin the businesses' revenues, a new report found.

  • January 16, 2026

    Ex-Client Defamed It With Fraud Allegations, Law Firm Says

    A law firm asked a court on Friday to find that a former client's series of emails accusing it of fraudulently overcharging him were accusing it of being dishonest as a matter of fact.

  • January 16, 2026

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

    This past week in London saw the David Lloyd gym chain file an intellectual property claim against its founder, security company Primekings reignite a long-running dispute with the former owners of an acquired business, and a pair of Belizean developers sue a finance executive they say shut them out of a cruise port project.

  • January 16, 2026

    Ex-Irwin Mitchell Solicitor Barred For Court Application Lie

    A former solicitor at Irwin Mitchell LLP has been banned from practicing after she lied to an unrepresented party over a court application in a family law matter and then tried to get a junior colleague to continue to mislead them.

  • January 16, 2026

    The Revolving Door: MoFo Snaps Up Corporate Tax Pro

    Over the past week, Morrison Foerster tapped a corporate tax partner from Davis Polk & Wardwell, Shoosmiths bolstered its banking and finance bench with two senior partners, Mayer Brown lost a leveraged finance veteran to HSF Kramer, and Baker McKenzie rehired a regulation specialist from Google.

  • January 15, 2026

    Harvey To Launch Paris Office In Bid To Expand European Biz

    The legal artificial intelligence platform Harvey is eyeing a stronger presence in Europe with the opening of a new office in Paris, the company announced Thursday.

  • January 15, 2026

    Osborne Clarke Appoints New Bristol Location Head

    Osborne Clarke LLP said Thursday that it has appointed a real estate partner as the new head of its office in Bristol.

  • January 15, 2026

    Daily Mail, Celebs Accuse Each Other Of Pushing New Claims

    Prince Harry and other public figures argued with the publisher of Daily Mail at court on Thursday, accusing each other of springing allegations on the eve of a mammoth trial over the newspaper's alleged use of unlawful information-gathering techniques.

  • January 15, 2026

    SRA Appeals To Revive Carter-Ruck OneCoin Crypto Case

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Thursday that it will appeal a tribunal's decision to throw out disciplinary proceedings against a Carter-Ruck partner for threatening a whistleblower exposing the OneCoin cryptocurrency scam.

  • January 15, 2026

    Solicitor Accused Of Falsifying Time Records To Face SDT

    The solicitors' watchdog has referred a lawyer to a tribunal over allegations of misconduct while he was at a firm in northwest England, including that he inflated the amount of time he spent carrying out client work.

  • January 15, 2026

    Axiom Ince Says SRA Negligently Failed To Spot £65M Fraud

    Axiom Ince has accused the Solicitors Regulation Authority in a court claim of bungling a probe into the firm and missing a chance to prevent further losses stemming from its former chief executive's alleged misappropriation of £65 million ($87 million) of client money.

  • January 15, 2026

    Employment Judge Sanctioned For 'Hostile' Behavior In Court

    An employment judge has been sanctioned for displaying "hostile" behavior during a tribunal hearing after facing broader allegations of bullying and intimidation by multiple claimants.

  • January 14, 2026

    Walkers' Chief Looks Beyond LLPs To Fuel Growth With PE

    The global managing partner of Walkers has said that its decision to take external investment from a private equity backer is a sign of things to come as law firms look beyond the limits of traditional partnership models.

  • January 14, 2026

    Fieldfisher Hires Ex-McDermott Brussels Leader

    Fieldfisher LLP has recruited the former managing partner of McDermott Will & Schulte's office in Brussels, one of two new hires in the Belgian capital to boost its services to clients in European Union regulatory and competition matters.

Expert Analysis

  • Extradition To The United States: Fight Or Flight?

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    Recent extradition cases have demonstrated that individuals in the United Kingdom facing charges in the United States can either fight extradition proceedings tooth and nail, or voluntarily travel to the U.S. An approach carefully tailored to the facts of each case is required in order to best protect a requested person's interests, says Ben Isaacs of 7 Bedford Row.

  • UK Internal Investigations Are Taking An Ungainly Turn

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    The London High Court's decision in Serious Fraud Office v. Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation has a lot to say on the vitality of legal professional privilege and the conduct of internal investigations in the U.K., but its flawed logic and lack of pragmatism feel like the latest installment in SFO Director David Green's pushback against U.S.-style investigation procedures, say Matthew Herrington and Tom Best of Steptoe & Johnson LLP.

  • Once More Unto The Breach — Rehearing In Newman?

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    On Friday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York decided to seek appellate review of several aspects of the recent insider-trading decision in U.S. v. Newman and Chiasson. En banc rehearing petitions are rarely granted in any circuit, and are particularly rare in the Second Circuit, which hears the fewest number of rehearings of any circuit in the country, say Eugene Ingoglia and Gregory Morvillo of Morvillo LLP.

  • UK Tax Advisers Are Beyond Legal Advice Privilege

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    A recent judgment from the U.K. Supreme Court in one of the most significant decisions on legal advice privilege for many years. Prudential PLC v. Special Commissioner of Income Tax, which dealt a blow to tax advisers and other nonlegally qualified service providers who provide legal advice to their clients, confirmed that — consistent with the position in the U.S. — legal advice privilege only protects communications to or from a qualified lawyer, say Richard Hornshaw and Daniel Cohen of Bingham McCutchen LLP.

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