Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • October 25, 2024

    Home Office Launches New Crackdown On Insurance Fraud

    A string of leading insurance organizations have agreed to clamp down on criminal attempts to manipulate the U.K. insurance market with fake claims, among a range of other pledges included in a government charter designed to tackle fraud in Britain.

  • October 25, 2024

    Fraud Lawyers Take On Bullying Cases As Complaints Surge

    White-collar criminal lawyers are picking up more and more work investigating allegations of non-financial misconduct inside the world's biggest companies, amid a sharp rise in incidents reported by the City watchdog ahead of an impending crackdown.

  • October 25, 2024

    FCA Sets Consumer Duty As Top Priority For CEOs In 2025

    The Financial Conduct Authority told CEOs of retail banks and other lenders in letters published Friday it will give a top priority to the Consumer Duty regime in 2025, focusing in addition on fair claims about sustainable products and managing financial crime risk.

  • October 25, 2024

    Commerzbank Can Pursue Staffer For Fake Sex Assault Claim

    A London court ruled Friday that a former Commerzbank AG analyst will face contempt of court proceedings after making false sexual assault allegations against a colleague as part of his failed harassment case against the bank.

  • October 25, 2024

    Pensions Watchdog Wants Tougher Action Against Scammers

    The Pensions Regulator has urged retirement savings plans to take action to protect savers from scams as part of Scams Awareness Week, with a video campaign featuring a victim.

  • October 24, 2024

    LinkedIn Hit With €310M Irish Fine For Targeted Ad Practices

    Ireland's data protection commission has handed down a €310 million ($335 million) penalty against LinkedIn for allegedly failing to have an adequate legal basis for processing European Union users' personal data for targeted advertising purposes, the regulator announced Thursday.

  • October 24, 2024

    FCA Finds Reports Of Bullying, Harassment Up Over 3 Years

    The Financial Conduct Authority on Friday said it has recorded a steady rise in nonfinancial misconduct reports over the past three years, including bullying, harassment and discrimination across banks, asset managers and insurers.

  • October 24, 2024

    Heineken Faces €160M Claim After Dutch Market Abuse Ruling

    Heineken was held jointly liable for its Greek subsidiary abusing its dominant position to hold back competitors by a Dutch court, paving the way for a rival brewery to press home its over €160 million ($173 million) antitrust claim against the beer giant.

  • October 24, 2024

    Union Threatens First-Ever Private Case Over Museum Strike

    A trade union threatened on Thursday to launch a private prosecution against the security contractors for London's Science and Natural History museums if they hire agency workers to replace workers who plan to strike during the busiest week of the year. 

  • October 24, 2024

    EU Court Upholds Annulment Of Intel's €1B Antitrust Fine

    Computer chip giant Intel Corp. has beaten the European Commission's €1.06 billion ($1.14 billion) fine against it after the European Union's highest court ruled that a lower court could invalidate the EU administrative arm's conclusions, ending a long-running legal battle over the 2009 fine.

  • October 24, 2024

    UK Corporate Register Warns Of AI Threat To Enforcement

    Britain's corporate register said Thursday in its first-ever strategic intelligence assessment that it will use identity verification to help clamp down on the abuse of company formations by criminals and money launderers, but that artificial intelligence poses a threat to enforcement.

  • October 24, 2024

    Russian Airline Kept Jets To Avoid Unrest, Lessor Exec Says

    A Siberian regional airline had to retain leased aircraft after the Russian invasion of Ukraine to avoid "social unrest," an executive for one of the aircraft lessors suing their insurers told a London trial Thursday.

  • October 24, 2024

    Watchdog Finds Inadequacies In Consumer Credit Firms

    The Financial Conduct Authority has found in a multifirm review that most consumer credit firms and nonbank mortgage lenders lack a clear view of the financial resources they consider adequate, making risk management difficult.

  • October 31, 2024

    Bird & Bird Taps Dutch Financial Regulation Pro

    Bird & Bird LLP has hired an experienced financial regulation expert as a partner in The Hague, as the law firm looks to bolster its finance practice in the Netherlands and across Europe.

  • October 24, 2024

    FCA 'Finfluencers' Crackdown May Prove More Bark Than Bite

    The Financial Conduct Authority's criminal prosecutions of finfluencers who might be illegally promoting unauthorized investments is likely to have only limited deterrence if overseas firms can simply ignore British rules with online offerings, according to lawyers.

  • October 23, 2024

    ECJ Won't Call Off Clawback Of Portugal's Tax Breaks

    The European Court of Justice declined to overturn a European Commission decision that Portugal must claw back tax breaks provided in a free trade zone to companies with no local economic activity, as those breaks violated the bloc's state aid rules, according to a judgment issued Wednesday.

  • October 23, 2024

    EU Tax Nominee Vows Corp. Tax Simplification, Pillar 1 Work

    The nominee to serve as the European Union's next tax commissioner pledged to simplify corporate rules and affirmed his support for the reallocation of taxing rights known as Pillar One in remarks to the European Parliament.

  • October 23, 2024

    Ex-Business Partners Deny Deceiving Investors For £12M

    Two former business partners have denied deceiving investors about how much money was required to set up a specialist bank and said the investment company suing the lender was prepared to invest regardless.

  • October 23, 2024

    BHP Pans 'Extreme' Brazilian Law Interpretation In £36B Trial

    BHP argued at a £36 billion ($46.6 billion) London trial Wednesday that it was not legally liable to more than 600,000 Brazilians for the country's worst environmental disaster, arguing it could not be held liable vicariously for the alleged wrongdoing of its joint venture.

  • October 23, 2024

    Firms Say FCA Could Better Encourage Innovation

    The Financial Conduct Authority could do more to facilitate growth and innovation and to act proportionately when making requests on firms, according to industry feedback published by the regulator Wednesday.

  • October 23, 2024

    FCA Warns Investors In Novus Black Investment Fund

    The financial watchdog said Wednesday it has written to investors into an alternative investment fund, warning them that it suspected the firm failed to tell them about "significant losses."

  • October 23, 2024

    SRA Taps New AML Director As Regulatory Uncertainty Looms

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Wednesday that it has appointed a new director of anti-money laundering, as the watchdog awaits a decision from the government on whether it will continue to supervise the industry in this area.

  • October 22, 2024

    Patients Seek To Revive Class Action Over Google Data Use

    Counsel for a group of patients urged an appeals court Tuesday to allow a claim accusing Google of misusing their health records for a kidney injury alert app to go ahead as a class action, arguing they had a reasonable expectation of privacy.

  • October 22, 2024

    Financial Ombudsman Beats Ex-Staffer's Whistleblowing Case

    The Financial Ombudsman Service has defeated a former employee's claim that it did not offer him a new role due to his alleged whistleblowing, convincing a tribunal in a ruling released Tuesday that his emails were not protected disclosures.

  • October 22, 2024

    Commerzbank Urges Contempt Case Over False Assault Claim

    Commerzbank AG asked a London court in a hearing Tuesday to allow it to bring contempt of court proceedings against a former employee who made false sexual assault allegations against a colleague as part of his failed harassment case against the bank.

Expert Analysis

  • Appeal Ruling Clarifies 3rd-Party Contract Breach Liability

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    The Court of Appeal's recent decision in Northamber v. Genee World serves as a warning to parties that they may be held liable for inducing another party to breach a contract, even if that party was a willing participant, say Neil Blake, Maura McIntosh and Jennifer O'Brien at HSL.

  • How Law Firms Can Handle Challenges Of Mass Claims

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    With a wave of volume litigation possibly about to hit the U.K. courts, firms developing mass claim practices should ensure they heed the Solicitors Regulation Authority's May warning and adopt strategies to ensure regulatory compliance and fair client representation, says Claire Van der Zant at Shieldpay.

  • EU Directive Significantly Strengthens Enviro Protection

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    The recently revised European Union directive on environmental protection significantly strengthens its prior legislation and broadens the scope of environmental crime through the introduction of offenses for conduct resulting in severe damage, say Katharina Humphrey and Julian Reichert at Gibson Dunn.

  • How Revision Of The EU Works Directive May Affect Cos.

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    The European Union’s proposed revision of the Works Councils Directive, motivated by perceived shortcomings of existing legislation and the transformation of the world of work, includes significant changes that would increase workers' rights, including through strengthened enforcement and confidentiality provisions, says Thomas Player at Eversheds Sutherland.

  • What The New Digital Markets Bill Will Mean For Companies

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    The recently passed Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Bill will bring significant reform to U.K. merger control and antitrust rules for all businesses, but the introduction of a strategic market status regime and its reporting obligations means large tech organizations in particular need to think carefully about the forthcoming changes, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • EU's AI Act: Pitfalls And Opportunities For Data Collectors

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    The European Union’s new Artificial Intelligence Act entails explicit requirements and limitations throughout the AI value chain that might affect firms directly or indirectly dealing with AI development, such as data-as-a-service companies and web scraping providers, says Denas Grybauskas at Oxylabs.

  • FCA Doubles Down On New Priorities With Target ID Plan

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    Respondents to the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent consultation on its plan to publicly name subjects under investigation are concerned that the regulator’s cost-benefit analysis has not adequately considered the risks, but the FCA is holding firm, and it seems likely the changes will be implemented, says James Tyler at Peters & Peters.

  • Insurance Ruling Stresses High Hurdle To Fix Policy Wording

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    In Project Angel v. Axis, the Court of Appeal recently refused to rewrite the exclusion clause of an insurance policy, reminding parties in the warranty and indemnity market to carefully word clauses, as there is a high threshold before courts will intervene to amend policies, say Joseph Moore and Laura McCann at Travers Smith.

  • CMA Reports Signal Tighter Scrutiny Of AI Model Markets

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    The Competition and Markets Authority’s recent reports on artificial intelligence foundation models suggest that competition in AI is not working as it should, so large digital firms can expect the regulator to use its full toolbox as it continues to monitor and investigate the sector, say lawyers at Cooley.

  • Taking Stock Of Changes UK Economic Crime Act Will Bring

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    With more than six months since the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act's enactment, it is time to look at the steps organizations can take to prepare for imminent changes, including the new failure to prevent fraud offense and extensions to Companies House authority, say lawyers at Mayer Brown.

  • Examining Senior Managers' Accountability For AI Use

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    With the Financial Conduct Authority's artificial intelligence update and the Prudential Regulation Authority’s letter to the government offering key guidance on the Senior Managers and Certification Regime, Senior Managers in these organizations need to show they have taken steps to prevent breaching requirements in order not to be held personally accountable, says Jennifer Holyoake at DLA Piper.

  • FCA Brokerage Changes Offer Asset Managers Wider Options

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    The Financial Conduct Authority’s fast-tracked plan to lift its controversial ban on joint payments to broker-dealers for third-party services will be welcomed by many asset managers wishing to return to a soft commission structure, say Richard Frase and Simon Wright at Dechert.

  • What Cos. Should Know About The EU Greenwashing Rules

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    The EU's recently proposed Green Claims Directive introduces new rules to improve the transparency and honesty of environmental claims in advertising, which will help ensure that consumers receive accurate and reliable information to make informed purchasing decisions, says Daja Apetz-Dreier at Morgan Lewis.

  • Sanctions Ruling Opens Door For Enforcer To Clear Up Rules

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    In Vneshprombank v. Bedzhamov, the High Court recently argued against a broader interpretation of the test on reasonable suspicion for asset freezes, offering the Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation an opportunity to clarify when freezes should be applied and respond to judicial criticism of its guidance on financial sanctions, says Tasha Benkhadra at Corker Binning.

  • How Gov't Response Addresses Investment Act Concerns

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    The government’s recently published response to a call for evidence on the National Security and Investment Act is largely appropriate to stakeholder concerns raised and demonstrates in its five areas of focus that it is willing to respond to live issues, say lawyers at Watson Farley.

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