Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • November 26, 2024

    Brokerage Service Denies Helping $129M Forex Fraud

    A provider of brokerage services has denied giving credit for a company that carried out an alleged $129 million Ponzi scheme, saying in court filings that it had no knowledge of the fraud.

  • November 26, 2024

    UK Regulators Propose Relaxing Rules On Bankers' Pay

    The Prudential Regulation Authority and Financial Conduct Authority jointly announced plans on Tuesday to ease restrictions on bonuses for senior bankers, with the aim to make the U.K. more competitive while ensuring accountability in risk management.

  • November 26, 2024

    OFSI Boss Promises Tougher Fines For Sanctions Breaches

    The head of the U.K. sanctions watchdog told MPs on Tuesday to expect more fines with tougher penalties for breaches of financial restrictions to be imposed on oligarchs in the coming months as he admitted that the crackdown has been slower than hoped. 

  • November 26, 2024

    Director Accused Of Bribery Was Unfairly Fired, But Wins £0

    A project director at the Hinkley Point C nuclear power station development was dismissed in a "complete absence of fair procedure," but has been awarded no compensation because he was complicit in alleged bribery, an employment tribunal has ruled.

  • November 26, 2024

    Macquarie Bank Fined £13M For 'Serious' Control Failings

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it has fined the London branch of Macquarie Bank Ltd. £13 million ($16.4 million) for significant weaknesses in its systems and controls that allowed a trader to conceal more than 400 fictitious trades over 20 months.

  • November 26, 2024

    FCA Plans Regulation As UK Crypto-Asset Ownership Grows

    The financial regulator published a plan Tuesday for regulating crypto-assets in the U.K. as it reported a rise in the number of British adults who now own digital currency and assets, up from 10% to 12% — or 7 million people.

  • November 25, 2024

    Employment Rights Bill 'Not Fit For Purpose'

    Plans to give employees the right to work flexibly and claim unfair dismissal from their first day in a job are "not fit for purpose," according to an official assessment published on Monday.

  • November 25, 2024

    Tax Hikes Will Make It Harder To Hire, UK Industry Chief Says

    Businesses will hire fewer workers as a result of raising employers' National Insurance contributions, a payroll levy, that was introduced in the autumn budget, the chief of one of Britain's most influential industry groups said Monday.

  • November 25, 2024

    Immovable Rule Shields Bedzhamov From Russian Bankruptcy

    A recent decision by Britain's highest court that the £35 million ($44 million) London home of a fugitive banker is beyond the reach of Russian bankruptcy laws has made it clear that a foreign court cannot enforce orders over English land.

  • November 25, 2024

    'Knight' Can't Lift Freeze On Woodland Mansion, Supercar

    A self-styled knight convicted of fraud failed to get a freezing order lifted against £1.1 million ($1.4 million) of his assets as a London court ruled on Monday that the civil recovery proceedings do not unfairly relitigate criminal confiscation efforts.

  • November 25, 2024

    Odey Can't View Medical Records Of Sexual Assault Accusers

    Crispin Odey failed on Monday to gain access to the medical records of five women who accuse him of sexual abuse, after a judge weighed in favor of the alleged victims' right to privacy.

  • November 25, 2024

    MPs Raise 'Deep-Rooted' Problems At FCA In Critical Report

    A report by a cross-party group of MPs will highlight the failures in the way the Financial Conduct Authority handles major scandals, despite its efforts to reform its culture and operations, according to advance details released Monday.

  • November 25, 2024

    FCA Rewrites Disclosure Rules, Handing Suspects The Reins

    Changes to disclosure rules at the Financial Conduct Authority will give defendants more insight into its investigations than ever before — though the development might swamp those that cannot afford top legal advisers, lawyers say.

  • November 25, 2024

    Barclays Fined £40M For Failing To Disclose Qatari Deals

    Barclays has been fined £40 million ($50.2 million) for the "reckless" arrangements the bank made with Qatari investors when it was raising fresh capital during the 2008 financial crisis, the Financial Conduct Authority said Monday.

  • November 22, 2024

    UK Enforcers Concerned Over Apple Mobile Browser Policies

    British competition enforcers said Friday that Apple's policies are holding back innovation in the mobile browser space and called for an investigation of the roles played by Apple and Google in the mobile ecosystem under new rules coming into force next year.

  • November 22, 2024

    Malaysia Looks To Shore Up Counterattack Over $14.9B Award

    Units of Malaysia's national energy company have kicked off new litigation in Delaware and New York, seeking additional information as they look to fight back against a massive $14.9 billion arbitral award issued in a territorial dispute stemming from a 19th-century land deal.

  • November 22, 2024

    Ex-Petrofac Staffer Forced To Resign Over Freelance Snub

    A former condition monitoring expert at Petrofac has won his unfair dismissal claim, after an employment tribunal ruled that bosses at the oil and gas firm unreasonably denied his requests to take on freelance work and forced him to quit.

  • November 22, 2024

    Teacher Stern Cleared Of Rules Breach Over Client Payments

    Teacher Stern LLP and two partners were cleared by a London disciplinary tribunal on Friday of breaching legal accounting rules and ethical regulations by allowing clients to transfer money that was not related to an underlying legal transaction or service.

  • November 22, 2024

    Fraud Victim Can't Revive Duty Claim Against NatWest

    A fraud victim failed Friday to revive its claim against National Westminster Bank PLC for not stopping more than £420,000 ($526,000) in payments to the scammers' bank account, after a London judge ruled the company did not have a reasonable chance of overturning the dismissal.

  • November 22, 2024

    CAT Approves £7B Google Claim Over Apple Search Monopoly

    The Competition Appeal Tribunal gave the green light on Friday to a consumer advocate's attempt to bring a £7 billion ($8.7 billion) class action against Google over claims the tech giant has blocked competitors from entering the search engine market on Apple products.

  • November 22, 2024

    Paragon Auditor Denied Interim Pay In Whistleblowing Claim

    An internal auditor at Paragon Bank has lost his bid for interim pay in his whistleblowing claims against the property finance lender as an appeals tribunal found he would struggle to prove that this was the reason he was sacked.

  • November 22, 2024

    Manchester Bombing Survivors' MI5 Claim Rejected As Late

    More than 250 survivors and the family members of people killed in the Manchester Arena bombing can't claim the U.K. intelligence services' failure to prevent the attack breached their human rights because the allegations were not brought in time, a London tribunal ruled Friday.

  • November 22, 2024

    Imprisoned Oligarch Asks UK Court To Hear Conspiracy Claim

    Lawyers for an oligarch imprisoned in Russia told a London court Friday that he was entitled to pursue litigation against pipeline giant Transneft in England, rather than Russia as the company wants, because a "not insignificant" proportion of the damage in the case was incurred in England.

  • November 22, 2024

    Putin Ally's In-law Charged With Paying Nephew's School Fees

    The brother-in-law of a former Russian politician faces new criminal charges for allegedly breaching sanctions after U.K. authorities accused him of paying for the children of an alleged ally of Vladimir Putin to attend a private school, a court heard Friday.

  • November 22, 2024

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

    This past week in London has seen cash-strapped Thurrock Borough Council bring a £40 million ($50 million) negligence claim against 23 other local authorities over its solar investments from a not-for-profit local government body, AstraZeneca sue a fire safety company following a blaze at its Cambridge headquarters last year, and a director who was convicted in 2016 for corporate manslaughter face action by Manolete Partners. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

Expert Analysis

  • How Energy Scheme Is Affecting Large Co. Fund Investment

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    The latest phase of the Department of Energy and Climate Change's Energy Savings Opportunity Scheme implicates funds with investments in large companies by establishing significant and complex changes to the reporting cycle for mandatory assessments, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.

  • How Companies House Enforcement Powers Are Growing

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    Companies House's recently increased ability to assess what material is submitted to the U.K. register of companies, and to proportionately enforce where violations have occurred, may require some degree of cultural shift within many companies, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.

  • How New Sanctions Office Will Affect UK Trade Landscape

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    The recent launch of the Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation will help to create a more comprehensive civil enforcement terrain, but the potential for multiple investigations means businesses should reassess their systems to ensure they do not inadvertently incur civil liability, says Julia Pearce at Robertson Pugh.

  • FCA Savings Update Focuses On Good Customer Outcomes

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent cash savings update emphasizes its expectations of firms to deliver fair value to consumers by documenting the rationale for actions at each stage, considering customer communications and demonstrating that potential harms are acted upon, say Matt Handfield, Charlotte Rendle and Caroline Hunter-Yeats at Simmons & Simmons.

  • Opinion

    Why The UK Gov't Should Commit To An Anti-SLAPP Law

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    Recent libel cases against journalists demonstrate how the English court system can be potentially misused through strategic lawsuits against public participation, underscoring the need for a robust statutory mechanism for early dismissal of unmeritorious claims, says Nadia Tymkiw at RPC.

  • 5 Takeaways From UK Justices' Arbitration Jurisdiction Ruling

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    The U.K. Supreme Court's recent judgment in UniCredit Bank v. RusChemAlliance, upholding an injunction against a lawsuit that attempted to shift arbitration away from a contractually designated venue, provides helpful guidance on when such injunctions may be available, say attorneys at Fladgate.

  • FCA's Broad Proposals Aim To Protect Customer Funds

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s proposed changes to payments firms’ safeguarding requirements, with enhanced recordkeeping and fund segregation, seek to bolster existing regulatory provisions, but by introducing a statutory trust concept to cover customers’ assets, represent a set of onerous rules, says Matt Hancock at Greenberg Traurig.

  • Complying With Growing EU Supply Chain Mandates

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    A significant volume of recent European Union legislative developments demonstrate a focus on supply chain transparency, so organizations must remain vigilant about potential human rights and environmental abuses in their supply chain and make a plan to mitigate compliance risks, say lawyers at Weil.

  • Takeaways From Upcoming Payment Fraud Delay Legislation

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    Lawyers at Hogan Lovells discuss what to know about new legislation that will allow payment service providers to delay payments when third-party fraud is suspected, and share pointers for providers to consider ahead of the Oct. 30 effective date.

  • What New EU Packaging Regulation Will Mean For Companies

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    The forthcoming Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation aims to regulate the entire life cycle of products from design to end-of-life waste, and will present particularly challenging deadlines for organizations, especially regarding recyclability and substances of concern, say Marcus Navin-Jones and Ward Overlaet at Crowell & Moring.

  • Modernizing UK Trade Settlement Standard: The Road Ahead

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    Andrew Tsang and Tom Bacon at BCLP consider the rationale and challenges of a potential U.K. trade settlement acceleration, part of an initiative to modernize the financial market infrastructure, and suggest that incorporating distributed ledger technology as a synchronized recording system would facilitate the move.

  • ICO Reprimand Highlights Importance Of Cookie Use Consent

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    The Information Commissioner's Office's recent reprimand of Bonne Terre's unlawful use of online advertising cookies confirms that companies using third-party tracking technologies are considered data controllers responsible for ensuring compliance, say Nessa Khandaker and Lynn Parker Dupree at Finnegan.

  • Analyzing The Implications Of 1st FCA Crypto ATM Crackdown

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent criminal prosecution of Olumide Osunkoya, its first enforcement action against a crypto-asset trading firm's owner, is an unambiguous sign of the regulator’s commitment to actively pursue transgressors, but may be a hindrance to the U.K. crypto industry, says Asim Arshad at Lawrence Stephens.

  • What EU Antitrust Guidelines Will Mean For Dominant Cos.

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    The European Commission’s recent draft antitrust guidelines will steer courts' enforcement powers, increasing the risk for dominant firms engaging in exclusive dealing without any apparent basis to shift the burden of proof to those companies, say lawyers at Latham.

  • Draft Merger Control Guidance Allows CMA To Cast Wide Net

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    The Competition and Markets Authority's recent draft merger control guidance, reflecting the regulator's strengthened powers under the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Act, introduces extensive change and potential procedural improvements, specifically concerning reviews of private equity firms, say lawyers at Travers Smith.

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