Try our Advanced Search for more refined results
Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
-
November 13, 2024
FCA Admits Mishandling Of 'Name And Shame' Roll-Out
The Financial Conduct Authority conceded on Wednesday that it might have handled its announcement of controversial plans to publish names of the firms it probes and other details of investigations at an earlier stage differently after heated protests from the sector.
-
November 12, 2024
Ex-CBA Chief Jo Sidhu Loses Privacy Bid In Harassment Case
The former chair of the Criminal Bar Association on Tuesday lost his bid to have a sexual harassment case against him heard behind closed doors, with a disciplinary tribunal ruling that the case should be held in public.
-
November 12, 2024
Forsters, Ex-Bank Lawyer Avoid Case Of Failed Property Deal
Forsters LLP and a former Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi lawyer have avoided being sucked into a philanthropist's £3.5 million ($4.7 million) legal battle over a collapsed property deal.
-
November 12, 2024
VistaJet Owner Loses Appeal To Block Tech Venture Claim
The Court of Appeal has rejected further efforts by the owner of one of the world's biggest private jet firms to block legal claims that he defrauded a Guernsey tech venture capital fund two decades ago.
-
November 12, 2024
Young Drivers Buying Fake Insurance, Aviva Says
Nearly one in three young drivers have bought fraudulent car insurance from criminals on social media, Aviva has said, urging teenagers and early adults to treat "too good to be true" deals with suspicion despite soaring costs testing consumers.
-
November 12, 2024
Biffa Sues Contractor For £2M Over Waste Scheme Tax Scam
Biffa is suing one of its contractors for £2.2 million ($2.8 million) for allegedly conspiring with two other waste management companies to disguise their waste in a scheme to secure lower tax rates.
-
November 12, 2024
NHS Medic Loses Appeal Over Health & Safety Whistleblowing
A paramedic has failed to convince a London appeals judge that a National Health Service trust punished him for blowing the whistle on an emergency call handler's health and safety failings.
-
November 12, 2024
BoE, Regulators Set Out Regime For Critical Third Parties
The Bank of England and other City regulators set out new rules on Tuesday for critical third parties such as cloud service providers used by finance firms to reduce the risk of failure and disruption to the market.
-
November 12, 2024
New Defined Benefit Pension Funding Code Goes Live
A long-awaited funding code for defined benefit retirement savings plans in the U.K. went live on Tuesday, introducing what the pensions minister described as a "stronger set of standards" for the sector.
-
November 12, 2024
FCA Strengthens Disclosure Process In Enforcement Cases
The Financial Conduct Authority has said it has improved its process for disclosing evidence to individuals and companies under investigation in regulatory enforcement cases, a move designed to cut the risk of omitting necessary documents.
-
November 12, 2024
Metro Bank Fined £16M For Failed Money Laundering Controls
Metro Bank PLC has been fined more than £16.6 million ($21.2 million) for not having proper systems to detect potential money laundering activity for more than four years, the financial watchdog said Tuesday.
-
November 11, 2024
Barings Lawyers Cleared Of Misleading Clients In SRA Case
A tribunal has dismissed a case against two senior lawyers at the consumer finance firm Barings Ltd. who were accused of misleading clients over payday loans claims and sending out letters on behalf of fictional clients, including Mickey Mouse.
-
November 11, 2024
Rival Amazon Claims Compete To Lead Retailers' Class Action
Lawyers representing two proposed rival class actions faced off at the Competition Appeal Tribunal on Monday as they vie to represent thousands of third-party Amazon retailers that claim the technology giant abuses its dominant position to boost its sales.
-
November 11, 2024
Motorola Fights UK Watchdog's Emergency Network Price Cap
Motorola asked the appellate court Monday to toss a decision by the antitrust watchdog that restricted how much the tech giant can charge Britain's emergency services to use its Airwave network, saying the limitation was based on errors in market calculations.
-
November 11, 2024
Ex-BGC Broker Accused Of Hiding Assets In £23M Fraud Case
A former BGC Partners employee faces a potential jail sentence after the U.S. financial services company accused him at a London court on Monday of hiding his assets in breach of restrictions imposed after a £23.5 million ($30.25 million) fraud against the business.
-
November 11, 2024
RPC's Sam Tate On DPAs, Fraud And The Appeal Of Plumbing
Sam Tate — now head of white-collar crime at RPC — decided to be a lawyer at the age of 11. Here, he tells Law360 about growing enforcement burdens on companies, problems surrounding the U.K.'s compensation models for whistleblowers and overseas victims, and how Nick Ephgrave's first year as SFO director stacks up.
-
November 11, 2024
FCA Fines Director Of Insurer For Misusing Money
The Financial Conduct Authority said Monday that it has banned the former director of an insurance broker from working in financial services and fined him £1.1 million ($1.4 million) for misusing money that was owed to insurers.
-
November 10, 2024
SRA Closed 43 Firms For Mishandling Client Money In 2023
The closure of Axiom Ince Ltd. by the solicitors' watchdog was just the tip of the iceberg, as new data shows that the regulator was responsible for shuttering more than 10% of all law firms which folded in 2023.
-
November 08, 2024
Cohen & Gresser Taps French Firm For White Collar Pro
Cohen & Gresser LLP has recruited a white collar expert in France to augment its capabilities representing clients in international regulatory investigations and cases involving allegations of financial crimes.
-
November 08, 2024
Oligarch's Estate Resists Fraud Claim In $3B Inheritance Fight
The estate of a Russian cement tycoon has resisted claims by his widow and daughter that the businessman plotted to defraud them of their inheritance as part of a battle over more than $3 billion worth of assets.
-
November 08, 2024
Apache To Pull North Sea Investments Over UK Windfall Tax
Texas-based oil giant Apache Corp. said Friday that it will wind up its North Sea oil operations by 2030 in response to the U.K.'s plan to raise the energy profits levy — known as the windfall tax — by 3 percentage points.
-
November 08, 2024
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen collapsed German airline Air Berlin take action against its former auditor KPMG, the associate editor at The Spectator hit with a libel claim by a mosque over the far-right riots that took place in August and British licensing authority the Performing Right Society sue Parklife Manchester and four other festival organizers. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
-
November 08, 2024
Insurers Urge Shared Approach To Define Major Cyber-Events
Limited historical evidence about major cyber-events makes it difficult to define the risks insurers face, experts have said, as they urge businesses to consider a shared approach when they describe "one of the most" prominent dangers to the sector.
-
November 08, 2024
Auditor Blames Lendy's Misstatements For Investor Losses
An auditor has admitted it made mistakes when it vetted a lending platform's accounts but denied the failures caused investors to lose an alleged £15.6 million ($20.2 million), claiming the platform had fraudulently misrepresented its financial health.
-
November 08, 2024
Shipowner Wins OK To Sell Oil Stranded At Sea By Sanctions
A shipowner can sell crude oil that was stranded at sea when the charterer was placed on a U.S. sanctions list, a London judge said Friday, ruling the cash from the ultimate buyer can be paid into the English courts.
Expert Analysis
-
Examining The EU's New Payments Services Package
Following recent European Parliament elections, the spotlight is turning to the highly anticipated payments services package expected in September, marking a pivotal moment in the legislative process that will reshape the payment services ecosystem in the European Union, says Kristýna Tupá and Karolína Hlavinková at Schoenherr.
-
Examining The State Of Paccar Fixes After General Election
Following the U.K. Supreme Court's Paccar decision last year, which made many litigation funding agreements for opt-out collective actions in the Competition Appeal Tribunal unenforceable, the judiciary will likely take charge in implementing any fixes — but the general election has created uncertainty, says Ben Knowles at Clyde & Co.
-
EU Reports Signal Greenwashing Focus For Financial Sector
Reports from the European Supervisory Authorities on enforcement of sustainability information, plus related guidance issued by the European Securities and Markets Authority, represent a fundamental change in how businesses must operate to maintain integrity and public trust, say Amilcare Sada and Matteo Fanton at A&O Shearman.
-
GDPR 6 Years On: Key Points From EU Report
The European Commission’s recent report on the General Data Protection Regulation is clearly positive, concluding that it has brought benefits to both individuals and businesses, but stakeholders are still awaiting essential guidelines on scientific research and important business concerns remain, say Thibaut D'hulst and Malik Aouadi at Van Bael & Bellis.
-
Opinion
Without Change, Fighting Fraud Is A Losing Battle For The UK
To successfully fight fraud cases in the U.K. — like the Russian Coms scam recently shut down by the National Crime Agency — it is clear there needs to be significant investment in recruiting and training expert investigators, and meaningful engagement between the country’s intelligence platforms, says Anthony Hanratty at Howard Kennedy.
-
Embedding Consumer Duty: 6 Areas Firms Should Prioritize
The Financial Conduct Authority has repeatedly emphasized that complying with the Consumer Duty is not a tick-box exercise but an ongoing responsibility, so firms need to show that the duty is at the heart of their practices by staying compliant in areas from cultural change to customer vulnerability, say Nicola Higgs and Becky Critchley at Latham.
-
2 UK Rulings Highlight Persistent Push Payment Fraud Issues
Two recent High Court decisions, Larsson v. Revolut and Terna DOO v. Revolut, demonstrate that authorized push payment fraud continues to cause headaches for consumers and financial institutions alike, and with forthcoming mandatory reimbursement requirements, more APP fraud litigation can be expected, say lawyers at Charles Russell.
-
Open Questions 3 Years After 2nd Circ.'s Fugitive Ruling
The Second Circuit’s 2021 decision in U.S. v. Bescond, holding that a French resident indicted abroad did not meet the legal definition of a fugitive, deepened a circuit split on the fugitive disentitlement doctrine, and courts continue to grapple with the doctrine’s reach and applicability, say attorneys at Lankler Siffert.
-
What Labour Has In Mind For UK Data Protection Law Reform
The U.K.'s new Labour government is indicating that it will strengthen the country's cybersecurity regime, and introduce artificial intelligence legislation similar to that of the European Union, in an attempt to further reform data protection law and harness the power of data for economic growth, says Victoria Hordern at Taylor Wessing.
-
ECJ Cartel Damages Rulings Are Wins For Multinational Cos.
Two decisions from the European Court of Justice last month clarifying the limits of the single economic unit doctrine in cartel damages proceedings will help multinational companies anticipate and prepare for litigation within a narrower band of possible jurisdictions, say lawyers at Linklaters.
-
Takeaways From EU's 'Pay Or Consent' Advertising Probe
Anne-Gabrielle Haie and Charles Whiddington at Steptoe examine key points from the European Commission's recent investigation into Big Tech's use of "pay or consent" advertising models, as well as the European Data Protection Board’s opinion on how such models can comply with EU competition and data protection laws.
-
Why NCA's 1st Seizure Of Sanctioned Funds Is Significant
The National Crime Agency’s recently secured forfeiture of a Russian oligarch's sanctioned funds was a landmark achievement, and is particularly notable because it was made under the Proceeds of Crime Act, illustrating how U.K. authorities can coordinate their respective powers to confiscate assets, says Lindsey Cullen at WilmerHale.
-
UK Judgment Could Change Anti-Money Laundering Regimes
After the Court of Appeal of England and Wales' determination that criminal property remains criminal property in the hands of its purchaser even if purchased at market value, many businesses could face a new or heightened risk of prosecution for criminality in their supply chains and related money laundering offenses, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.
-
Takeaways From First EU Foreign Subsidy M&A Investigation
The European Commission's recent investigation into Emirates Telecommunications' proposed acquisition of PPF Telecom is the first in-depth investigation of an M&A deal under the Foreign Subsidies Regulation, demonstrating that the regulation can have real consequences in practice that companies must consider at the outset of large transactions, says Matthew Hall at McGuireWoods.
-
Takeaways From New FCA Rules On Research Payments
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recently published final rules on payment optionality for investment research, which involve a client disclosure obligation option, will be welcome news for U.K. managers who buy investment research from U.S. brokers, and for global asset management groups, says Anna Maleva-Otto at Schulte Roth.