Pulse UK

  • September 23, 2025

    Wexler Launches New AI Tool As It Raises $5.3M

    Wexler announced Tuesday it has raised more than $5 million from outside investors, and it unveiled a new legal fact-checking feature that can be used in real time in court proceedings.

  • September 23, 2025

    Canfields Law Denies Blame For Alleged £4M Property Fraud

    The London law firm Canfields has denied negligently handling a high-value property investment, responding to allegations that it facilitated a fraud that cost a Hong Kong business executive more than £4 million ($5.4 million).

  • September 23, 2025

    Keystone Law's Revenue Hits £54M In First-Half Results

    Keystone Law said Thursday that its revenue passed £50 million ($68 million) and profits soared by 25% as it released its interim results for the first half of its latest financial year.

  • September 23, 2025

    Axiom Fraud Spurs SRA To Revamp Emergency Meeting Rules

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Tuesday that it has adopted new criteria to help decide when to call emergency board meetings, after admitting it waited about six weeks to report the Axiom Ince fraud to its board.

  • September 23, 2025

    SRA Board To Reassess Plans Amid 24% Spike In Complaints

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Tuesday that its board will revisit its business plan for the next financial year, citing growing pressure on resources including a sharp rise in misconduct reports involving solicitors.

  • September 29, 2025

    Squire Patton Hires 2 White Collar Pros From Paul Hastings

    Squire Patton Boggs LLP has expanded its international government investigations and white collar practice in London by hiring two lawyers from Paul Hastings LLP.

  • September 29, 2025

    Clyde & Co. Adds Employment Lawyers From DAC Beachcroft

    Clyde & Co. has hired two occupational disease experts as partners in its U.K. casualty insurance practice, as the firm reacts ​​to growing client demand for specialist expertise in complex workplace litigation.

  • September 22, 2025

    Linklaters Bolsters Italy Team With Top M&A Partner Hire

    Linklaters LLP has hired mergers and acquisitions expert Massimiliano Nitti as a partner and head of the corporate department to strengthen its presence in Italy to advise its international corporate and private equity clients.

  • September 22, 2025

    Law Firm Launches Employment Claims Insurance Scheme

    Trethowans LLP has launched a new service to help businesses reduce their exposure to the financial risks they face defending themselves at the employment tribunal as it becomes easier for workers to bring legal claims against their employers.

  • September 22, 2025

    SRA Penalizes 2 Law Firms For AML Failures

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Monday that it has fined two law firms for failing to take steps to combat the risk of being exposed to money-laundering activity.

  • September 22, 2025

    HSF Kramer Debuts Tool To Map GC AI Attitudes

    Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer LLP said Monday that it has launched a tool to help general counsel assess their use of generative AI, as law firms race to stay ahead by understanding what clients want from the technology.

  • September 19, 2025

    Midwife Can't Sue Regulator, Barrister Over Sanction

    An employment tribunal ruled that it has no jurisdiction to consider a midwife's bias claims against the profession's regulator, as she had a statutory right of appeal under the regulator's own rules to fight a decision that her ability to practice was "impaired."

  • September 19, 2025

    Ex-Simmons Partner Can't Speed Up Labour Candidacy Feud

    A former Simmons & Simmons LLP partner cannot accelerate his claim against the Labour Party over its decision to block his bid for election to a local council, a London court said in an order made public Friday.

  • September 19, 2025

    The Revolving Door: Orrick Bags Gibson Dunn Energy Pair

    Over the past week, Gibson Dunn & Crutcher lost a pair of energy and infrastructure partners to Orrick, a former SFO case controller joined Boutique Law and TLT tapped Vodafone's head of legal operations for its FutureLaw team.

  • September 19, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen brokerage firm ADS Securities file a fresh claim against German entrepreneur Lars Windhorst, AmTrust and Endurance Worldwide Insurance tackle an ongoing £50 million ($67 million) dispute over a failed litigation and insurance scheme, and Howard Kennedy LLP sue the son of a diamond tycoon over a £3.1 million legal bill. 

  • September 19, 2025

    Mishcon Names Ex-NatWest CEO Alison Rose As Non-Exec Chair

    Mishcon de Reya LLP on Friday appointed former NatWest bank head Alison Rose as its independent non-executive chair, who will help to steer the law firm's new growth strategy across three key sectors and international markets.

  • September 19, 2025

    AmTrust, Novitas Settle £56M Litigation Funding Dispute

    A legal loans company has settled its £56 million ($76 million) claim against AmTrust over who should cover the costs of a failed litigation funding scheme, a lawyer for the insurance giant told a court Friday.

  • September 19, 2025

    Trowers Targets Avison Young For Lease-Renewal Failures

    Trowers & Hamlins has hit back at a claim that it bungled the renewal of a skip company's commercial lease, arguing that it was not instructed to do so and that either the waste haulage business or Avison Young was to blame.

  • September 19, 2025

    Boodle Hatfield Recruits Private Client & Tax Pro 

    Boodle Hatfield LLP has appointed a private client and tax partner from Taylor Wessing LLP as the 300-year-old law firm looks to enhance its offering in the two matters.

  • September 19, 2025

    SRA Eyes Stricter Rules On Litigation-Funding Practices

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority called for responses from the legal profession on Friday to help it understand consumer risks in litigation-funding for high-volume claims, following the collapse of SSB Group in 2024. 

  • September 18, 2025

    Bird & Bird Opens Lisbon Office, Expanding Iberian Reach

    Bird & Bird LLP said Thursday that it has hired a new team in Portugal to open an office in Lisbon, strengthening its position in the wider Iberian market after expanding its footprint in Japan and Saudi Arabia in recent years.

  • September 18, 2025

    Baker Botts Hires Dubai Aviation Team From White & Case

    Baker Botts LLP has hired an aviation finance and transaction team of three from White & Case for its Dubai office, as the firm continues to expand its energy, digital infrastructure, and technology-driven finance practices across the Middle East.

  • September 18, 2025

    AI Law Internship Debuts At Simmons & Simmons In London

    Simmons & Simmons LLP said Thursday that it has launched an artificial intelligence law internship for students and future lawyers, as firms increasingly use technology to deliver legal services.

  • September 18, 2025

    Carter-Ruck Hired By CryptoQueen 'In Furtherance Of Fraud'

    Fugitive cryptocurrency scammer Ruja Ignatova instructed Carter-Ruck "in furtherance of fraud," and therefore legal filings linked to the prosecution by the Solicitors Regulation Authority of a partner at the law firm must be made public, a tribunal has ruled.

  • September 18, 2025

    Former SFO Case Controller Joins Boutique Law As Partner

    A former case controller at the Serious Fraud Office has joined criminal and regulatory specialist firm Boutique Law LLP as a partner.

Expert Analysis

  • Preparing For EU's Pay Gap Reporting Directive

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    An agreement has been reached on the European Union Pay Transparency Directive, paving the way for gender pay gap reporting to become compulsory for many employers across Europe, introducing a more proactive approach than the similar U.K. regime and leading the way on new global standards for equal pay, say attorneys at Lewis Silkin.

  • Has The Liberalization Of Legal Services Achieved Its Aims?

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    Although there is still some way to go, alternative business structures are now an increasingly prominent feature of the legal services landscape, and clients can expect greater choice, improved quality and more manageable costs, as was intended by this shake-up of the profession's regulatory frameworks 15 years ago, says Dana Denis-Smith at Obelisk Support.

  • How Overseas Property Verification Poses Risks To Attorneys

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    The recently launched register of overseas entities, requiring verification of foreign owners hoping to purchase U.K. property, could expose attorneys to criminal prosecution, professional negligence claims and reputational damage if they do not complete these checks to the required standard, which nevertheless remains murky, says Harriet Holmes at Thirdfort.

  • What To Expect From UK's New Economic Crime Bill

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    The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency bill, if passed, will reform aspects of Companies House and strengthen government anti-money laundering efforts, but it is also raising questions about how new information sharing requirements will affect businesses, say attorneys at Signature Litigation.

  • A Trusted Cybersecurity Framework Is Imperative For Lawyers

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    The recent increased risk of cyberattacks has a number of profound implications for law firms, and complying with government guidance by embedding a cyber-savvy culture and adhering to a security framework will enable lawyers to add extra layers of defense and present their clients with higher levels of protection, says Marion Stewart at Red Helix.

  • Opinion

    Law School Admissions Shouldn't Hinge On Test Scores

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    The American Bar Association recently granted law schools some latitude on which tests it can consider in admissions decisions, but its continued emphasis on test scores harms student diversity and is an obstacle to holistic admissions strategies, says Aaron Taylor at AccessLex.

  • New FCA Listing Rules May Start Regulatory Shift On Diversity

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    Listed companies that fail to meet new Financial Conduct Authority rules for minimum executive board diversity currently risk reputational damage mainly through social scrutiny, but should prepare for potential regulatory enforcement actions, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • What UK Professional Regulation Looks Like In A #MeToo Era

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    Two recent rulings from U.K. courts and tribunals reveal the increasingly shifting line between professional misbehavior and bad actions that would previously have been considered outside the scope of professional regulators, says Andrew Katzen at Hickman & Rose.

  • How Immune Are State Agents From Foreign Courts?

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    The ongoing case of Basfar v. Wong is the latest to raise questions about the boundary between commercial or private activity and the exercise of sovereign authority that shields state agents from foreign judicial scrutiny — and the U.K. Supreme Court's upcoming decision in the matter will likely bring clarity on exceptions to the immunity doctrine, say Andrew Stafford QC and Oleg Shaulko at Kobre & Kim.

  • Opinion

    Justice Gap Demands Look At New Legal Service Models

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    Current restrictions on how lawyers structure their businesses stand in the way of meaningful access to justice for many Americans, so states should follow the lead of Utah and Florida and test out innovative law firm business models through regulatory sandboxes, says Zachariah DeMeola at the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System.

  • Opinion

    New NJ Fed. Rule On Litigation Funding Should Be Welcomed

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    The District of New Jersey's new local civil rule on litigation funding disclosure has faced exaggerated criticisms when it is a logical extension of the current practices in many U.S. jurisdictions, leads to greater transparency for the parties and the court without unduly burdening the parties, and is a positive development particularly in product liability cases, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • Lessons In Civility From The Alex Oh Sanctions Controversy

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    Alex Oh’s abrupt departure from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and admonishment by a D.C. federal judge over conduct in an Exxon human rights case demonstrate three major costs of incivility to lawyers, and highlight the importance of teaching civility in law school, says David Grenardo at St. Mary's University.

  • Rebuttal

    US Legal System Can Benefit From Nonlawyer Ownership

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    Contrary to claims made in a recent Law360 guest article, nonlawyer ownership has incrementally improved the England and Wales legal system — with more innovation and more opportunities for lawyers — and there is no reason why those outcomes cannot also be achieved in the U.S., say Crispin Passmore at Passmore Consulting and Zachariah DeMeola at the University of Denver.

  • Increasing Investment Scams Can Implicate Lawyers, Too

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    With the pandemic serving as a catalyst for increased financial fraud, it's important to recognize that these scams are not only devastating for victims, they also pose a significant threat to law firms and individual solicitors who fail to do their due diligence, say James Darbyshire at the Financial Services Compensation Scheme and Heather Clark at Burness Paull.

  • UK Lawyers Can Adapt Due Diligence To Screen New Clients

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    As COVID-19-related fraud gains pace, U.K.-based practitioners should help combat money laundering by using alternative methods to verify that new clients are who they say they are, says Christopher Convey, a barrister at 33 Chancery Lane and chair of the Bar Council's Money Laundering Working Group.

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