Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • March 11, 2025

    Exec Wins Bid To Challenge Name Disclosure In Bribery Case

    A former executive acquitted of bribery won permission Tuesday to attempt to keep their name out of a judgment detailing a bribery settlement with the Serious Fraud Office after a judge ruled he had an "arguable" case that his privacy rights trumped transparency.

  • March 11, 2025

    Clyde & Co Hires RPC White Collar Quartet

    Clyde & Co. LLP said Tuesday that it has recruited Sam Tate, the former head of white-collar crime at Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP, as its global head of regulatory and investigations, along with three other RPC hires.

  • March 11, 2025

    Staley Denies Knowledge Of Epstein's 'Monstrous Activities'

    Jes Staley told a tribunal on Tuesday that he would not have maintained a relationship with Jeffrey Epstein if he had known about the disgraced financier's "monstrous" activities.

  • March 11, 2025

    EU Council Adopts Digital VAT Reform Package

    The Council of the European Union said Tuesday that it has adopted reforms to adapt the EU's value-added tax regime to the digital economy.

  • March 11, 2025

    UK Regulators Seek AI Guidance From Industry

    Britain's financial and data regulators have reached out to U.K. trade bodies and business chief executives for guidance on how to provide regulatory certainty on artificial intelligence.

  • March 11, 2025

    FCA Mulls Customer Redress For Motor Finance Failings

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Tuesday that it would probably launch a redress program for providers of car finance to compensate buyers if a review shows widespread failure to comply with requirements on commissions.

  • March 11, 2025

    Dentons Must Face AML Allegations Again After Tribunal Error

    Dentons must face allegations that it breached money laundering rules for a second time as a London court sent the Solicitors Regulation Authority's case against the firm back to a disciplinary tribunal for reconsideration on Tuesday after finding the tribunal had taken a mistaken approach to the case.

  • March 11, 2025

    Infected Blood School Defeats Ex-Pupils' Group Claim Bid

    A senior High Court judge on Tuesday blocked an application from dozens of former pupils of a school at the center of an infected blood scandal to join together in a single group to seek damages from its trust.

  • March 10, 2025

    BBC Spent £1.3M On Huw Edwards Scandal Fallout

    The British Broadcasting Corp. spent more than £1.3 million ($1.68 million) on legal advice and an internal review spurred by complaints against disgraced presenter Huw Edwards.

  • March 10, 2025

    COVID Loan Abuse Still Behind Over Half Of Director Bans

    More than 650 directors have been disqualified for abusing the COVID-19 financial support scheme in the past 12 months, a U.K. government agency announced Monday in a signal that authorities are still tackling the increasingly distant offenses.

  • March 10, 2025

    Barclays' Jes Staley Was 'Honest' With FCA Over Epstein Ties

    Former Barclays boss Jes Staley has denied attempting to mislead the Financial Conduct Authority about his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, telling a tribunal on Monday that he always maintained they had a "close professional relationship."

  • March 10, 2025

    Addleshaw Wins Bankruptcy Order Against Former LC&F Boss

    Addleshaw Goddard has obtained a bankruptcy order against a former boss of London Capital & Finance after a court ruled he defrauded investors out of £237 million ($306 million) by running the investment company like a Ponzi scheme.

  • March 10, 2025

    German Election Raises Doubts About Pillar 2 From Tax Pros

    The new German government could end up abandoning the international corporate minimum tax agreement known as Pillar Two because of rising competition between the U.S. and Europe, experts told Law360.

  • March 10, 2025

    Accountant Who Missed Fraud Wins Sham Redundancy Case

    A home renovations business must pay a former accountant who failed to spot an employee embezzling more than £13,000 ($17,200) after a tribunal found that the company had no genuine reason to cut her job.

  • March 07, 2025

    £800M Pollution Class Action Against Water Cos. Rejected

    The U.K.'s competition court on Friday threw out an £800 million ($1 billion) proposed class action against several water companies over their alleged failure to report pollution, concluding that the case was excluded by legislation governing the water businesses. 

  • March 07, 2025

    FCA Can Reject Criticism Of Redress For Misselling Scandal

    The Financial Conduct Authority is entitled to "reasonable disagreement" with an official review that criticized its decision to exclude around 10,000 transactions from a compensation scheme for a bank misselling scandal, a court ruled Friday.

  • March 07, 2025

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

    This past week in London has seen an Iranian oil company sued for $95 million, Betfred hit with a lawsuit from a property company and NHS England face a human rights claim brought by a man detained under the Mental Health Act for over 20 years. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.

  • March 07, 2025

    Four Men Imprisoned For 43 Yrs For Money Laundering Plot

    Four men involved in a plot to launder £266 million ($343 million) in criminal cash were on Friday sentenced to a total of more than 43 years in prison, in one of the biggest cases of its kind ever prosecuted in England.

  • March 07, 2025

    Barclays Asked Andrew Bailey To Speed Up Staley Probe

    Andrew Bailey testified Friday that Barclays asked him to "expedite" an investigation into its chief executive, Jes Staley, while he was head of the U.K. financial regulator amid concerns about the fallout from the probe into the CEO's relationship with Jeffrey Epstein being made public.

  • March 07, 2025

    Xeinadin Settles £1M Claim Against Ex-Director Over Poaching

    Accountancy group and business adviser Xeinadin has settled its over £1 million ($1.3 million) claim against the former director of an accountancy firm it acquired over allegations he had sought to lure clients and employees to a rival practice after he was ousted from the business.

  • March 07, 2025

    Bulgarians Convicted Of Spying For Russia

    Three Bulgarians in a U.K.- based spy ring that targeted high profile targets in operations across Europe before passing information along to a Russian agent were convicted of spying at a London court on Friday.

  • March 07, 2025

    Ex-Liverpool Mayor And 11 Others Charged With Bribery

    Prosecutors charged on Friday the former mayor of Liverpool and 11 other ex-politicians and business figures with bribery and misconduct in public office over allegations public contracts were improperly awarded over a span of a decade.

  • March 07, 2025

    FCA Awaits Gov't Answer To City Consumer Duty Pushback

    The Financial Conduct Authority is waiting for the government to clarify how much consumers can be exposed to risk in favor of more growth-focused regulation as the watchdog faces push back from the sector against its flagship consumer protection program.

  • March 06, 2025

    Fundamental Problems With AML Oversight, Charity Warns

    The U.K.'s legal regulators show long-standing and fundamental problems in their approach to anti-money laundering supervision, an anti-corruption charity warned in a report Thursday amid an almost two-year government consultation that has yet to publish its response.

  • March 06, 2025

    Ex-Credit Suisse Banker Avoids Prison In 'Tuna Bond' Fraud

    A Brooklyn federal judge spared a former Credit Suisse banker from prison time Thursday, after he pled guilty and became a testifying government cooperator over a plot to defraud investors in a $2 billion state-backed development initiative in Mozambique.

Expert Analysis

  • 2 Highlights From Labour's Notable Employment Rights Bill

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    The Labour government’s recently unveiled Employment Rights Bill marks the start of a generational shift in U.K. employment law, and its updates to unfair dismissal rights and restrictions on fire-and-rehire tactics are of particular note, say lawyers at Covington.

  • 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.

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