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Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
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September 12, 2025
EU Lets Microsoft Unbundle Teams To Avoid Fine
European Union antitrust officials signed off Friday on Microsoft's plans to offer cheaper Office 365 suites without the Teams collaboration platform in order to avoid a potentially hefty fine for past policies shackling the two services together.
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September 12, 2025
Another Investor Settles In $2.1B Danish Tax Fraud Case
A U.S. investor and two of his alleged pension plans have settled claims by Denmark's tax agency accusing them of participating in a $2.1 billion scheme that fraudulently claimed refunds on tax withheld from stock dividends, with a New York federal court dismissing the allegations.
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September 12, 2025
Glencore Ruling Affirms Disclosure Trumps Prosecution Fears
A recent High Court decision that forced Glencore to hand over documents obtained from a Dutch investigation provides further evidence of the difficulties companies face when they try to resist disclosure in civil proceedings by pointing to the risk of prosecution overseas.
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September 12, 2025
Ankle Tag Co. Says Ex-CEO Forged Docs To Hide Wrongdoing
A British ankle tag maker has accused its former chief executive of forging documents to cover up wrongdoing, adding to its £320 million ($434 million) claim that she hid her interests in the company's shareholders and diverted millions from the business.
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September 12, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen former Master Chef presenter Gregg Wallace sue the BBC, Elon Musk's xAI take legal action against a staff engineer, and fashion mogul Kevin-Gerald Stanford file a fresh claim against Lion Capital-owned Klotho and EY amid a long-running All Saints share acquisition dispute.
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September 12, 2025
Barrister Disbarred Over False Claims About Oxford Degree
A London legal disciplinary tribunal disbarred a King's Counsel barrister on Friday for falsely claiming that he had studied medicine at the University of Oxford when he applied for tenancy at a chambers in 2013.
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September 12, 2025
Class Rep Says £650M Motorola Claim Should Be Opt-Out
The representative of a £650 million ($881 million) collective action against Motorola urged a London tribunal on Friday to certify the unfair pricing case as an opt-out claim, arguing that this would prevent alleged victims from being denied justice.
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September 12, 2025
Travelers Sued For £5.8M Client Funds Lost In Axiom Collapse
A property buyer has sued Travelers for a £5.8 million ($7.9 million) insurance payout under its policy with Axiom Ince, telling a London court that the company had misappropriated his payment for an apartment before collapsing into administration.
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September 12, 2025
UK Law Enforcement Seizes Record £285M In Dirty Money
Law enforcement agencies seized a record £285 million ($386 million) in dirty money in 2024, with much of the cash reinvested in front line policing as a substantial portion was handed back to victims, according to the government.
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September 11, 2025
Google, Apple Fight Proposed UK App Ranking, Pay Mandates
Apple and Google both pushed back on proposals by United Kingdom antitrust authorities to stop the companies from boosting their own apps and using commission-based payment systems but took slightly different approaches, according to separate responses made public Thursday.
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September 11, 2025
FIFA Lifts Lid On Sports Disputes With New Legal Database
The worldwide governing body of soccer has launched a free, searchable digital database of soccer-related cases adjudicated by the Court of Arbitration for Sport and the Swiss Federal Tribunal going back to 2002 in an effort to promote transparency in sports law.
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September 11, 2025
FCA Official Outlines Risk-Based Approach To Financial Crime
Fighting financial crime isn't a barrier to growth but a prerequisite for economic investment, a senior official at the Financial Conduct Authority said on Thursday, as he outlined plans to take a "risk-based" approach to cracking down on fraud.
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September 11, 2025
SRA Fines Law Firms Over Absent AML Client Risk Checks
The Solicitors Regulation Authority has fined a law firm £13,690 ($18,570) and another £4,282 over their eight-year-long failure to assess the money laundering risk of clients, damaging public trust in the solicitors' profession.
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September 11, 2025
Chelsea FC Hit With 74 Charges Over Agent Payments By FA
The Football Association brought 74 charges against Chelsea Football Club on Thursday, alleging that the Premier League outfit had breached regulations on payments to agents and third-party investment in players between 2009 and 2022.
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September 11, 2025
Pensions Watchdog Urges Vigilance On 'Impersonation Fraud'
The retirement savings watchdog has urged pensions chiefs to tighten security amid a rising trend in which scammers attempt to pass themselves off as members of a retirement savings plan.
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September 11, 2025
'Digital Bandit' Loses Appeal Against Hacking Spree Findings
An English appeals court upheld on Thursday findings that a 20-year-old man suffering from severe autism hacked technology giants Uber, Nvidia and Rockstar Games, ruling that although it was unfair that jurors had learned about his previous convictions it didn't undermine the result.
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September 10, 2025
DOJ Must Hand Over Documents To Ex-JPMorgan Trader
A Washington, D.C., federal judge has ruled that the U.S. Department of Justice did not properly withhold portions of documents that reference grand jury exhibits from a former JPMorgan trader that were part of a market manipulation case that he beat in 2018, and ordered the DOJ to turn over the documents in question.
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September 10, 2025
Waste Co. Loses Bid To Inspect Search Warrant Details
A waste management company has failed to gain access to material used to obtain a search warrant for a probe by the U.K.'s competition regulator after a London tribunal ruled that the public interest in regulators being able to effectively investigate outweighed the company's interests.
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September 10, 2025
Ex-Ukrainian President Loses Fight To Lift EU Sanctions
Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych lost his fight to shake European Union sanctions Wednesday, with a court finding that he "clearly contributed to the destabilization" of the country by calling for Russian military intervention and plotting to oust Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
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September 10, 2025
FCA Hauls 3 'Finfluencers' To Court For Illicit Forex Promotion
Three individuals charged with advertising unauthorized investment opportunities in foreign exchange markets on social media made their initial court appearance Wednesday as part of what the Financial Conduct Authority said was a wider global crackdown on illegal online promotions.
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September 17, 2025
Twenty Essex Adds 4 New Barristers After Pupillages
Twenty Essex has revealed that four new barristers have joined its chambers after completing their pupillages, adding experience from New York through to Australia.
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September 10, 2025
Tribunal Warns Fee Disputes Could Undermine CPO Regime
The chair of a U.K. competition tribunal raised concerns Wednesday about the effect "another" fee dispute between funders and lawyers could have on the collective actions regime during a hearing on unclaimed damages from a claim over train fares.
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September 10, 2025
Abramovich Loses Appeal To EU Sanctions Over Evraz Ties
Roman Abramovich failed to lift European Union sanctions against him on Wednesday as judges ruled they are justified because the oligarch is a main shareholder in the steel company Evraz, one of the largest taxpayers in Russia.
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September 10, 2025
Meta, TikTok Win Legal Challenge Over EU Supervisory Fees
Meta and TikTok won a legal challenge on Wednesday over the way the European Commission calculates the fees it charges to cover the cost of supervising large technology companies, as a court ruled that the executive body had got the process wrong.
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September 10, 2025
MoD Programs Tainted By Bribery Given Clean Bill Of Health
The public spending watchdog gave two major U.K. defense programs implicated in a sprawling bribery probe a clean bill of health on Wednesday, sparking criticism from campaigners that its report was whitewashing serious, state-endorsed corruption.
Expert Analysis
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Expect Complex Ruling From UK Justices In Car Dealer Case
While recent arguments before the U.K. Supreme Court in a consumer test case on motor finance commissions reveal the court’s take on several points argued, application of the upcoming decision will be both nuanced and fact-sensitive, so market participants wishing to prepare do not have a simple task, says Tom Grodecki at Cadwalader.
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Why Cos. Should Investigate Unethical Supply Chain Conduct
The U.K. government’s recent updated guidance for businesses on reporting slavery and human trafficking in supply chains underscores the urgent need for companies to adopt transparent and measurable due diligence practices, reinforcing the broader need for proactive internal investigations into unethical or criminal conduct, say lawyers at Seladore and Matrix Chambers.
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FCA Bulletin Highlights Risks Of Leaking Inside M&A Info
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent bulletin on the consequences of leaking sensitive information during transactions, warning that such disclosure may result in market abuse allegations, demonstrates the regulator’s determination to root out and penalize insider dealing, say lawyers at Cadwalader.
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New Anti-Corruption Task Force Bolsters Int'l Collaboration
The recent creation of an anti-corruption task force by the U.K., France and Switzerland demonstrates a commitment to tackling bribery within national and international frameworks, and organizations within these jurisdictions’ remit, including U.S. companies operating in Europe, should review their compliance practices to ensure they address diverging requirements, say lawyers at Skadden.
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FCA's Regulatory Plans Signal Cause For Cautious Optimism
The Financial Conduct Authority’s latest strategy document plans for less intrusive supervision, a more open and collaborative approach, and a focus on assertive action where needed, outlining a vision of deepened trust and rebalanced risk that will be welcomed by all those it regulates, says Imogen Makin at WilmerHale.
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How CMA Is Responding To UK Gov't Pro-Growth Agenda
With the U.K. government’s recent call for the Competition and Markets Authority and other regulators to better support economic growth, the competition policy landscape is shifting materially toward an emphasis on a more proportionate and targeted approach to merger enforcement, say lawyers at Macfarlanes.
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US Diversity Policies Present Challenges To UK And EU Cos.
Following President Donald Trump’s recent executive orders calling for increased scrutiny of diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives, it is clear that global businesses operating in the U.K. and European Union will need to understand regional nuances to successfully navigate differing agendas on either side of the Atlantic, say lawyers at Jenner & Block.
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Updated EU Procedure Streamlines Data Transfer Approval
The European Data Protection Board’s updated approval procedure for binding corporate rules for transfers of personal data to non-European Union countries promotes consistency for regulator communications during the application process, and sets expectations for processing timelines, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.
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What Cos. Must Note From FCA Bulletin On Leaking M&A Info
The Financial Conduct Authority’s recent bulletin on strategic leaks in merger and acquisition transactions, as the second such publication in four months, acts as a warning for issuers and their advisers to tighten up their current policies for handling inside information, say lawyers at Herbert Smith.
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FCA's Odey Decision Is Wake-Up Call For Financial Firms
The Financial Conduct Authority recently banned hedge fund boss Crispin Odey from working in financial services, underscoring the critical importance the regulator places on whether individuals are fit and proper to perform regulated activities, and the connection between nonfinancial misconduct and the integrity of the financial markets, say lawyers at Pallas Partners.
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How Ransomware Payment Reforms Could Affect UK Cos.
The Home Office’s recent proposals to ban ransomware payments by publicly owned bodies is a welcome first step in its aims to tackle the cybercrime industry, but the risk remains that hackers will now focus on private companies that are still permitted to pay a ransom, says Dominic Holden at Lawrence Stephens.
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Key Takeaways From The 2025 Spring Antitrust Meeting
Leadership changes, shifting priorities and evolving enforcement tools dominated the conversation at the recent American Bar Association Spring Antitrust Meeting, as panelists explored competition policy under a second Trump administration, agency discretion under the 2023 merger guidelines and new frontiers in conduct enforcement, say attorneys at Freshfields.
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Rising To The Task Of Online Safety Act Compliance
The arrival of the Online Safety Act’s deadlines for all in-scope services and children’s access in March and April, enabling the Office of Communications to begin enforcing safety duties regarding illegal content, presents formidable compliance challenges for affected businesses, says Louisa Chambers at Travers Smith.
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Google Win Illustrates Hurdles To Mass Data Privacy Claims
The Court of Appeal's December decision in Prismall v. Google, holding each claimant in a mass data privacy suit must demonstrate an individualized and sufficiently serious injury, demonstrates the difficulty of using representative action to collect damages for misused private information, say lawyers at Seladore Legal.
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What To Know About FCA's UK Listing Rules Proposal
A recent consultation paper from the Financial Conduct Authority aims to streamline the securities-listing process for U.K.-regulated markets, including by allowing issuers to submit a single application for all securities of the same class, and aligning the disclosure standards for low-denomination and wholesale bonds, say lawyers at Debevoise.