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Pulse UK
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October 10, 2025
The Revolving Door: Pinsent Lures Ashurst Markets Head
Over the past week, Pinsent Masons strengthened its London office with Ashurst's head of capital markets, Mayer Brown hired a corporate and equity specialist from Goodwin, and Orrick appointed four partners from Cadwalader. Here, Law360 looks at these and more of the week's most notable lateral hires around the U.K.
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October 10, 2025
Burges Salmon, HSF, Pinsent To Aid Nuclear Waste Programs
Burges Salmon, HSF Kramer and Pinsent Masons have been appointed by a subsidiary of the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority to provide legal support on its infrastructure and development programs.
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October 10, 2025
Agent Blames Law Firm For Bungled £1.1M Property Sale
An agent has blamed a law firm for a bungled £1.1 million ($1.5 million) real estate deal that ended with the lawyers settling a negligence case, as she denied allegations that she intentionally tried to sell a property she did not have the rights to.
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October 09, 2025
Greenberg Traurig's Singapore Office Gains 6 More Attys
Greenberg Traurig LLP announced on Wednesday that its Singapore location has added the former leader of Simmons & Simmons LLP's Asian investment funds practice, along with five other attorneys.
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October 09, 2025
Taylor Rose Promotes 9 Partners In Latest Round
Taylor Rose said it has elevated nine lawyers to its partnership, noting that legal consultants accounted for three of those promotions following a surge in practitioners operating outside the traditional model.
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October 09, 2025
Lawfront Names New Chief Finance Officer Amid Growth Push
Lawfront Group Ltd. has appointed a new chief finance officer as it targets further expansion, having acquired more than a dozen law firms since it was founded in 2021.
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October 16, 2025
Weil Hires 4 More Latham Private Equity Lawyers In Germany
Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP has appointed four more private equity lawyers for its practice in Germany, adding to its previous hires from Latham & Watkins LLP in a practice area where there is considerable lateral movement.
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October 09, 2025
Ex-BLM Lawyer Must Pay £16K After Divorce Filing Delay
A tribunal has ordered a former head of family law at Berrymans Lace Mawer LLP to pay £16,500 ($22,000) after he oversaw a delay applying for a divorce decree, though it has ruled that he was only culpable of not providing adequate supervision to junior staff.
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October 09, 2025
Ex-KWM London Chief Cleared Over Kiss With Junior Staffer
The former managing partner of the London arm of King & Wood Mallesons was cleared of misconduct charges on Thursday as a tribunal said it could not conclude that he kissed a junior female colleague without her consent on a drunken night out.
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October 09, 2025
Developer Sues Paris Smith For £1.5M Over Land Deal Delays
A property developer has sued Paris Smith LLP for approximately £1.5 million ($2 million), alleging that the law firm's negligence caused significant delays in acquiring land to build houses in southern England.
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October 08, 2025
Pogust Downplays Risk Of SRA Scrutiny Over Dieselgate Exit
Pogust Goodhead has told a London judge that there is no reason to believe regulators would interfere with a proposed agreement that would see the law firm step back from the high-profile Dieselgate litigation.
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October 08, 2025
CPS Has Immunity Over Victim Address Leak In Court
A London appeals court ruled Wednesday that the Crown Prosecution Service is immune from a claim by a domestic abuse victim after its advocate inadvertently revealed the victim's new address to her abusive ex-partner in court.
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October 08, 2025
PE-Backed Research Group Completes £43M The Lawyer Buy
Researcher Legal Benchmarking Group has finalized its acquisition of U.K. trade publication The Lawyer for £43 million ($58 million) from media group Centaur Media PLC, the companies said Wednesday.
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October 08, 2025
Eversheds Sutherland Retains 67% Of Trainees In 2025
Eversheds Sutherland said Wednesday that it has retained two-thirds of its qualifying intake of U.K.-based trainees in 2025 and boosted the salaries of newly qualified lawyers.
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October 08, 2025
White & Case Retains 86% Of London NQs In September
White & Case said Wednesday that 86% of trainees in its London office who qualified as solicitors in September have stayed on to pursue careers at the firm, a similar figure to the one it recorded earlier in 2025.
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October 08, 2025
Employment Judges Seek Input On Pension Loss Rules
A working group of British employment judges is reviewing the framework for how compensation for losses to pensions in a dispute is calculated in the U.K.
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October 07, 2025
Paris Biz Litigation Firm Le 16 Law Hires Atty From Liedekerke
French law firm Le 16 Law said Tuesday it has strengthened its international arbitration team with the engagement of an experienced lawyer who most recently practiced at Belgian firm Liedekerke.
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October 07, 2025
Ex-IT Exec Sues His Lawyers After Losing Hacking Case
A former chief technology officer has sued the law firm that represented him in civil proceedings against his ex-employer following his conviction for hacking their computer systems, accusing the law firm of breaching its duties by refusing to pursue an appeal argument.
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October 07, 2025
Dye & Durham Sells AML Software Biz For $104M
Toronto-based legal technology company Dye & Durham Ltd. announced Tuesday the sale of its subsidiary Credas Technologies Ltd. to U.K.-based anti-money laundering software provider SmartSearch for £77.8 million ($104.4 million).
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October 07, 2025
Class Reps Vie To Bring Rival Ad-Price Claims Against Google
A former judge and a competition law scholar on Tuesday fought to bring rival multibillion-pound class actions against Google over allegedly unfair advertising pricing practices, each arguing at a London tribunal that they would be the better candidate to take on the tech giant.
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October 07, 2025
AIG Denies Liability In £176K Solicitors' Negligence Claim
The U.K. arm of AIG has said it does not owe a retired teacher £176,000 ($237,000) to cover the alleged professional negligence of his insolvent solicitors in a row over an historic clinical negligence claim the insurer argued was "doomed to fail."
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October 07, 2025
Law Firms Push Gov't To Reverse PACCAR Judgment
Mishcon de Reya, Leigh Day and almost 20 other major legal players have urged the U.K. government to urgently introduce legislation to reverse a Supreme Court judgment from 2023 that upended litigation financing, saying its failure to do so is hindering access to justice.
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October 07, 2025
Ex-Law Firm Chief Denies Initiating Kiss With Junior Staffer
The former managing partner of King & Wood Mallesons' London arm denied initiating a kiss with a junior female colleague on a drunken night out, telling a disciplinary tribunal on Tuesday that the colleague kissed him.
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October 14, 2025
Dentons Hires Covington Lawyer For UAE Office
Dentons has hired a partner from Covington & Burling LLP at its Dubai office to bolster its corporate team as it expects to see more dealmaking in the Middle East.
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October 07, 2025
Quinn Client Fights To Shield Firm From Ex-Staffer's Abuse
A client of Quinn Emanuel asked a London appeals court on Tuesday to prevent a former employee from sending abusive messages to the firm's lawyers in a case that was set to test a novel area of law.
Expert Analysis
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Pitfalls Lawyers Should Avoid When Correcting Their Mistakes
When solicitors make mistakes that cause prejudice to their clients, they will need to carefully consider whether they should try to fix their mistake, as trying to put things right may expose them to potential regulatory action, says Andrew Pavlovic at CM Murray.
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Translating The Plan For English-Language German Courts
The German Ministry of Justice is aiming to do away with the mistakes of the past and overhaul the German civil procedure in order to accommodate English-language disputes, but the success of these proceedings will depend very much on factors that the proposal does not address, say Jan Schaefer and Rüdiger Morbach at King & Spalding.
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A Breakdown Of The SRA's Proposed New Fining Powers
Thanks to the Solicitors Regulation Authority's pending new fining framework, which includes guidance on unsuitable fines and a fixed penalties scheme for low-level breaches, firms can expect to see more disciplinary findings leading to an SRA fine rather than referral to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, say Graham Reid and Shanice Holder at RPC.
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Russian Bank Ruling Clarifies UK Sanctions Regime
The recent U.K. High Court judgment of PJSC National Bank Trust v. Mints, a case brought by two Russian banks, is significant in clarifying that the U.K. sanctions regime does not deprive designated persons of their fundamental common law right to bring a claim in an English court, despite their assets being frozen, says Zoe O’Sullivan KC at Serle Court.
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Preparing For EU's Pay Gap Reporting Directive
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.
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Has The Liberalization Of Legal Services Achieved Its Aims?
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.
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How Overseas Property Verification Poses Risks To Attorneys
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.
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What To Expect From UK's New Economic Crime Bill
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.
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A Trusted Cybersecurity Framework Is Imperative For Lawyers
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.
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Opinion
Law School Admissions Shouldn't Hinge On Test Scores
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.
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New FCA Listing Rules May Start Regulatory Shift On Diversity
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.
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What UK Professional Regulation Looks Like In A #MeToo Era
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.
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How Immune Are State Agents From Foreign Courts?
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.
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Opinion
Justice Gap Demands Look At New Legal Service Models
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.
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Opinion
New NJ Fed. Rule On Litigation Funding Should Be Welcomed
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.