Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • March 27, 2026

    EU Court Told To Uphold €7.7M Cartel Fine For Packaging Biz

    An EU court correctly interpreted rules on how competition cases are shared between national regulators and the European Commission when it upheld a cartel fine of €7.67 million ($8.83 million) against Crown Holdings Inc., an advocate general has said.

  • March 27, 2026

    Crown Court Backlog Tops 80K As Gov't Promises Action

    The Ministry of Justice has said the number of cases awaiting trial at Crown Courts in England and Wales has climbed above 80,000 for the first time as the government said it would pull "every lever" to cut the growing backlog.

  • March 26, 2026

    SRA Says Dentons AML Case Needs Fresh Tribunal

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Thursday that the Court of Appeal should uphold a ruling that a regulatory tribunal should rehear allegations that Dentons had breached anti-money laundering regulations, arguing that the tribunal had misdirected itself.

  • March 26, 2026

    UK Hits Crypto Network Tied To Cambodia Scam Hub

    The U.K. sanctioned on Thursday a "key lieutenant" to the billionaire businessman behind Cambodia's scam centers as well as a major crypto marketplace catering to fraudsters in the latest crackdown on online threats that target Britons.

  • March 26, 2026

    Italy Seizes €20M Tied To Fraud Against Ursula Andress

    Italian police said Thursday that they have seized approximately €20 million ($23 million) worth of assets in Florence, suspected to be the proceeds of money laundering that allegedly targeted James Bond actor Ursula Andress.

  • March 26, 2026

    FCA To Use AI To Spot Consumer Harm Faster In New Plan

    The Financial Conduct Authority set out plans on Thursday to use artificial intelligence as a regulatory tool to authorize businesses and detect harm faster in its annual work program.

  • March 26, 2026

    Odey Denies Threat To Shut Biz To Scupper Misconduct Probe

    Crispin Odey denied at a tribunal on Thursday that he threatened to shut down his hedge fund to force executives not to impose restrictions on him to safeguard women at the firm after repeated allegations of sexual misconduct.

  • March 26, 2026

    EU Adopts Landmark Anti-Corruption Law

    European Union lawmakers passed a new set of bloc-wide anti-corruption rules on Thursday that will streamline legal definitions and set out penalties for bribery, misappropriation and economic crimes as the bloc seeks to crack down on corruption across borders.

  • March 26, 2026

    Whistleblower Bank Exec Wins Costs In Welsh Bribery Feud

    A bank in Wales must help pay a former senior executive's costs in a dispute over claims that it fired him for raising concerns that his line manager was allegedly accepting bribes from the CEO. 

  • March 26, 2026

    UK Watchdog Revamps Audit Supervision In Quality Boost Bid

    The accounting watchdog has launched a modernized supervisory framework for audit firms, centered on their systems of quality management used to deal with risks to audit quality.

  • March 26, 2026

    Ex-Police Federation Treasurer Gets 2 Yrs For Expenses Fraud

    A former police officer and treasurer with the West Mercia Police Federation has been sent to prison after using members' funds to pay for family holidays, alcohol and entertainment.

  • March 26, 2026

    Fraud Plan Puts FCA At Forefront Of UK Crypto-Crackdown

    The Financial Conduct Authority has been given a lead role in targeting money laundering, crypto-assets and money transfer scams in a government fraud strategy involving multiple agencies, which lawyers expect will boost enforcement action and heap a new compliance burden on financial institutions.

  • March 25, 2026

    Amazon Can't Ax Overlapping Price Inflation Class Actions

    Amazon has failed to strike out a class action over its allegedly abusive pricing policies which saw higher fees passed on to consumers, as a tribunal rejected the technology giant's argument that the proceedings are an abuse of process.

  • March 25, 2026

    Dentons Says AML Claims Shouldn't Face Tribunal Rerun

    Dentons on Wednesday sought to block allegations it breached anti-money laundering regulations being litigated before a tribunal for a second time, arguing at the Court of Appeal that the case had been rightly dismissed the first time.

  • March 25, 2026

    Modi Can't Block India Extradition Over Torture Fears

    A London court declined on Wednesday to stop the extradition to India of jewelry magnate Nirav Modi over an alleged $2 billion fraud after accepting diplomatic assurances he wouldn't be tortured.

  • March 25, 2026

    Odey Denies Trying To Silence Groping Victim In FCA Probe

    Crispin Odey told a London tribunal on Wednesday that he denied trying to stop a member of staff who he had groped from speaking to the Financial Conduct Authority while it investigated his conduct at the hedge fund.

  • March 25, 2026

    UK Mulls Faster Director Bans In Civil Enforcement Shake-Up

    The government floated plans on Wednesday to streamline the civil enforcement powers of corporate watchdogs to ban unscrupulous directors as it warned that as many as one million companies might be fraudulent.

  • March 25, 2026

    CPS Freezes £81M London Flats In Wealth Order Probe

    A Chinese man living in the U.K. has been ordered to explain how he built an £81 million ($108 million) property portfolio in London amid a wider investigation into whether the money was the proceeds of crime.

  • March 25, 2026

    Russian Sanctions Blocked $69M Unicredit Lease Payments

    Unicredit rightly withheld $69.3 million in payments to aircraft lessors for planes stranded in Russia, Britain's top court ruled Wednesday, as it found that the sanctions regime prevented the bank from making payments connected to the supply of aircraft to Russian airlines.

  • March 24, 2026

    Judge Sanctions Searches For Proceeds Of €58M VAT Fraud

    A judge lawfully issued search and seizure warrants against a man convicted in Germany over a €58 million ($67.2 million) value-added tax "carousel" fraud, a London court has held, because there were reasonable grounds to suspect he had invested the proceeds in Bitcoin.

  • March 24, 2026

    Deutsche Bank Seeks To Grill Vik Over Assets In $360M Fight

    Deutsche Bank urged the Court of Appeal on Tuesday to revive its bid to order Monaco-based billionaire Alexander Vik to answer questions about his company's assets, in the latest development in its effort to enforce a judgment debt of more than $360 million.

  • March 24, 2026

    Brazilian Municipalities Can't Take BHP Case To Top UK Court

    BHP may not face criminal contempt proceedings over allegations it filed a case in Brazil to block English claims linked to the Fundão dam collapse, as a London appeals court has refused permission to take the case to the U.K.'s top court.

  • March 24, 2026

    Odey Regrets Coming Across To Staff As 'Creepy Old Man'

    Crispin Odey said on Tuesday that he regrets coming across to young receptionists as a "creepy old man," as his challenge to a ban and fine of £1.8 million ($2.4 million) for thwarting an internal probe into sexual misconduct allegations continues.

  • March 24, 2026

    NCA, Police Arrest 557 In Anti-Fraud 'Operation Henhouse'

    Police arrested 557 individuals in February as part of the Operation Henhouse campaign against fraud, coordinated by the National Economic Crime Centre at the National Crime Agency and City of London Police, the NCA said Tuesday.

  • March 24, 2026

    Mike Lynch's Estate Denied Appeal In HP Fraud Case

    Mike Lynch's estate has been refused permission to challenge a ruling that the entrepreneur fraudulently misled Hewlett Packard Enterprise over its acquisition of his software company as a court found on Tuesday that no proposed ground of appeal had a prospect of success.

Expert Analysis

  • UK Refusal Of US Extradition Request May Set New Standard

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    The recent U.K. Supreme Court ruling in El-Khouri v. U.S., denying a U.S. extradition request, overturns a long-held precedent and narrows how U.K. courts must decide such requests, potentially signaling a broader reevaluation of U.K. extradition law, say lawyers at Dechert and Kingsley Napley.

  • Insights On ESMA's Alternative Investment Fund Consultation

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    Aaron Mulcahy at Maples Group discusses key points from the European Securities and Markets Authority’s recent consultation on open-ended loan-originating alternative investment funds, highlighting the growth in semi-liquid evergreen funds and explaining ESMA’s proposed standards.

  • How UK Supreme Court May Assess Russia Sanctions Cases

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    In two recent U.K. Supreme Court cases challenging the U.K. Russia sanctions regime, the forthcoming judgments are likely to focus on proportionality and European Convention on Human Rights compatibility, and will undoubtedly influence how future challenges are shaped, says Leigh Crestohl at Zaiwalla.

  • Roundup

    Practice Leader Insights

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    Practice group leaders share thoughts on keeping the pulse on legal trends, tackling difficult cases and what it takes to make a mark in their area in this Expert Analysis series.

  • How EU Digital Act Could Shape UK Technology Disputes

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    Noncompliance with the recently effective European Union Digital Operational Resilience Act will add layers of complexity to disputes and litigation for U.K.-based firms servicing EU entities, but international standards may serve as a bridge between jurisdictional and contractual misalignments, says Siobhan Forster at Alvarez & Marsal.

  • Key Findings From EU Report On Antitrust Remedies

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    Although the European Commission’s recent report assessing the effectiveness of its antitrust policy on behavioral remedies is not binding, it may influence future cases and promote coherence, providing useful insights for national competition authorities and courts when considering remedies in their own jurisdictions, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.

  • How Foreign Cos. Should Prep For New UK Fraud Law

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    As the U.K. prepares to hold companies criminally liable for failing to prevent fraudulent acts of their associates, U.S. and global companies should review their compliance measures against the broad language of this new offense, which could permit prosecution of acts committed entirely abroad, say attorneys at Latham & Watkins.

  • Opinion

    EU's AI Code Of Practice Creates Risk Of Regulatory Clashes

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    The second draft of the European Commission's Artificial Intelligence Code of Practice significantly expands beyond the European Union's existing legal framework for AI — especially around copyright protection, public transparency and reporting obligations — and risks interfering with other EU laws by introducing requirements contrary to existing regulations, say lawyers at MoFo.

  • Ruling In SFO Case Shows How Contract Rules Apply To DPAs

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    The Court of Appeal’s recent decision upholding the Serious Fraud Office's first-ever attempt to enforce an expired deferred prosecution agreement illustrates that the courts' approach to DPAs is governed by the rules of contract, and that the intention of the parties at the time of agreement is critical to contract interpretation, say lawyers at Simmons & Simmons.

  • What To Know About Compliance As EU AI Act Takes Effect

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    Raj Shah at Mishcon de Reya explains how recently effective provisions of the European Union Artificial Intelligence Act, which concern prohibited AI practices and AI literacy, will affect both providers and users of AI systems, and suggests steps that companies can take now to plug any compliance gaps.

  • Banker Remuneration Proposals Could Affect More Than Pay

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    The Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority’s pending proposals to reduce banker remuneration restrictions bring obvious personal financial advantages for bankers, but may have repercussions that result in increased scrutiny of bonus payments and wider changes to workplace culture and overall accountability, say lawyers at Fox Williams.

  • Rethinking 'No Comment' For Clients Facing Public Crises

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    “No comment” is no longer a cost-free or even a viable public communications strategy for companies in crisis, and counsel must tailor their guidance based on a variety of competing factors to help clients emerge successfully, says Robert Bowers at Moore & Van Allen.

  • EU Report May Influence Regulation Of Decentralized Finance

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    The European supervisory authorities’ recent report on decentralized finance highlights the major regulatory challenges and increased cybersecurity risks of this ecosystem, and will likely provide useful guidance on how the market could be regulated to limit potential risks for investors, say Hubert de Vauplane and Hugo Bordet at Morgan Lewis.

  • EU Paper Urges Data Protection And Competition Law Unity

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    A recent European Data Protection Board position paper calls for closer cooperation among data protection and competition authorities, and provides valuable insight for businesses seeking to ensure compliance across an increasingly complex regulatory landscape, say lawyers at Paul Weiss.

  • Market Infrastructure Regs Aim To Reinvigorate EU Trading

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    The recently amended European Market Infrastructure Regulation, imposing a requirement on certain financial and nonfinancial institutions to maintain an active EU counterparty account, hopes to incentivize the central clearing of trades, although there are concerns that higher compliance costs will lead to a decrease in competitiveness, say lawyers at McDermott.

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