Reluctance among lawyers to raise the alarm on suspicious clients is hampering the fight against economic crime as companies wrestle with legal and cultural issues that could land them in hot water with regulators.
The Serious Fraud Office's bribery settlement with a British defense contractor underscores the agency's policy shift toward cutting deals in less than ideal circumstances, offering a blueprint on how to realign derailed negotiations, lawyers say.
New legislation laid out in the King's Speech on Wednesday included the government's plans for a bill to strengthen trading ties with the European Union alongside an Enhancing Financial Services Bill in the next 12 months, but lawyers warn that the scope remains limited with potential unexpected consequences.
New powers that put companies on the chopping block for crimes committed by their executives dramatically expand corporate liability to include a wider array of offenses, which businesses already struggling with "compliance fatigue" have barely begun to grapple with, lawyers say.
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Reluctance among lawyers to raise the alarm on suspicious clients is hampering the fight against economic crime as companies wrestle with legal and cultural issues that could land them in hot water with regulators.
The Serious Fraud Office's bribery settlement with a British defense contractor underscores the agency's policy shift toward cutting deals in less than ideal circumstances, offering a blueprint on how to realign derailed negotiations, lawyers say.
New legislation laid out in the King's Speech on Wednesday included the government's plans for a bill to strengthen trading ties with the European Union alongside an Enhancing Financial Services Bill in the next 12 months, but lawyers warn that the scope remains limited with potential unexpected consequences.
New powers that put companies on the chopping block for crimes committed by their executives dramatically expand corporate liability to include a wider array of offenses, which businesses already struggling with "compliance fatigue" have barely begun to grapple with, lawyers say.
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June 15, 2026
Britain's tax authority can collect an exit tax charged on over £142 million ($190 million) in gains from a real estate company and on over £330,000 in assets from a family trust, provided that the tax is paid in a five-year installment plan, a London court ruled.
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June 15, 2026
An OnlyFans software platform has denied a rival company's claim that it breached competition law by failing to make user data readily available, telling a London court that it was under no obligation to do so.
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June 15, 2026
A company director has been sentenced to four years in prison for diverting more than £3 million ($4 million) through an insolvency fraud and money laundering scheme, the Insolvency Service said.
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June 15, 2026
A senior barrister accused of cheating the public purse out of almost £2 million ($2.7 million) told a court on Monday that he was "morally entitled" to pursue a strategy to reduce his tax liability.
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June 15, 2026
Technology and telecoms companies should be forced to join banks in compensating consumers for payment fraud, the body representing financial institutions in the U.K. said on Monday, as it revealed that criminals stole £1.28 billion ($1.72 billion) in 2025.
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June 15, 2026
The government said Monday that it has appointed three new members to the board of the pensions watchdog in a move to bolster its leadership ahead of sweeping reforms that are set to reshape the retirement sector.
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June 12, 2026
A Chinese businessman suspected of financial crime linked to his U.K. property interests lost a bid on Friday to force a London Stock Exchange Group unit to explain how his name appeared on a database of high-risk individuals.
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June 12, 2026
The past week in London has seen the FCA bring a claim against a fund manager it accused of providing investment services despite having been banned, an Ardmore unit sue a contractor two days before the construction group's collapse, and shipping and cruise giant MSC hit back at an entertainment company following separate intellectual property litigation in the U.S. Here, Law360 looks at these and other new claims in the U.K.
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June 12, 2026
The leaders of a £23.4 million ($31.3 million) money laundering ring that cleaned money for Irish and Kurdish organized criminals were sentenced to a total of more than 27 years' imprisonment at a London court Friday.
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June 12, 2026
A U.K. drinks business has accused an American beverage brand creator of obtaining a $1.1 million U.S. court judgment by fraud in a dispute over the British company's purchase of a wine brand.
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June 12, 2026
The U.K.'s financial crime police force said it had arrested a man who had faked his own death to support a fraudulent insurance claim, as part of a national fraud crackdown.
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June 12, 2026
Former executives at a British defense contractor can be named as part of a corporate bribery settlement owing to the public interest in identifying them, a London judge has ruled, in a potentially precedent-setting legal decision for open justice published Friday.
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June 11, 2026
The former CEO of Austrian lender Meinl Bank AG on Thursday pled guilty in Brooklyn federal court after a yearslong fight over accusations he helped Odebrecht SA hide $170 million in funds used to bribe officials around the world and defraud the Brazilian government out of more than $100 million in taxes.
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June 11, 2026
A Manhattan federal judge allowed a former Moelis & Co. investment banker to avoid prison Thursday after he voluntarily traveled to the United States to cop to his role in a large insider trading conspiracy that profited from stolen merger secrets.
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June 11, 2026
The Serious Fraud Office secured a £96,000 ($128,000) confiscation order on Thursday against one of seven men who defrauded thousands of investors out of £8.2 million through a sham biofuel company.
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June 11, 2026
A mortgage provider won a dispute Thursday with the sanctioned daughter of Russian arms manufacturer Mkrtich Okroevich Okroyan when a London judge ruled that it can claim her home because she cannot make due payments.
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June 11, 2026
S&P knowingly generated artificially high credit ratings for risky securities to win business before the 2008 financial crisis, an investment company that acquired claims from several Bear Stearns funds alleged in a new court claim.
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June 11, 2026
A senior barrister accused of cheating the public purse out of almost £2 million ($2.7 million) told a court Thursday that he had set up "tax-efficient" arrangements which "anyone with any sense would use."
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June 11, 2026
The chief executive of an investment bank will challenge a £99,600 ($133,000) fine for allegedly failing to disclose sanctions imposed by U.S. finance regulators and that Venezuelan authorities had frozen his bank accounts, the Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday.
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June 11, 2026
Two men who "showed a blatant disregard for international sanctions" were convicted on Thursday of illegally selling arms and military equipment to war-torn countries in Africa and the Middle East, HM Revenue and Customs said.
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June 11, 2026
The U.K.'s accounting watchdog opened an investigation on Thursday into the conduct of individuals and firms involved in auditing the books of failed mortgage lender Market Financial Solutions, whose collapse has sparked allegations of a £1.3 billion ($1.7 billion) fraud.
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June 11, 2026
The U.K.'s financial services regulator won an order on Thursday putting a currency exchange and international payment processing business into special administration over concerns about a suspected £2.8 million ($3.7 million) shortfall in customer money accounts.
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June 10, 2026
A senior tax barrister told a court Wednesday that HM Revenue and Customs prosecuting him for evading almost £2 million ($2.7 million) in tax was its way of "canceling" a person the tax authority found "extremely inconvenient."
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June 10, 2026
A company owned by Iranian-American telecoms entrepreneur Bita Daryabari accused a property developer Wednesday of defrauding it out of more than £2.3 million ($3 million) over four years by understating rental income from a luxury apartment.
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June 10, 2026
The European Union's fraud prosecutor won its fight on Wednesday to force the bloc's auditing agency to lift confidentiality for 12 officials so they can give evidence to an investigation into recruitment "irregularities" concerning one of the auditor's employees.