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Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
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March 11, 2026
Illegal Sale-And-Rent-Back Scheme Boss Sentenced To Prison
A man has been sentenced to two and a half years in prison for running an unauthorized property deal scheme that targeted struggling homeowners with offers to buy their homes and rent them back, the U.K.'s financial regulator said Wednesday.
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March 11, 2026
Barrister's Libel Claim Against Neidle Dismissed As SLAPP
A judge has struck out a barrister's £8 million ($11 million) libel claim against Dan Neidle, ruling on Wednesday that the case had no chance of succeeding and amounted to a strategic legal claim designed to silence the legal blogger.
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March 11, 2026
Police Scotland Fined £66K Over 'Serious' Data Breach
The data regulator said Wednesday that it has fined Scotland's police force £66,000 ($88,400) after it disclosed an individual's mobile phone data to a third party after they reported a crime.
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March 11, 2026
Stalker Solicitor Sentenced To Two-Year Community Order
A magistrates' court has hit a solicitor convicted of stalking with a two-year community order, and has required him to complete 300 hours of unpaid work and 20 days of rehabilitation after he harassed a court blogger.
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March 11, 2026
Direct Line Unit Fined £10.6M For Solvency Miscalculation
The Prudential Regulation Authority said on Wednesday that it has fined UK Insurance Ltd. £10.63 million ($14.27 million) for miscalculations that led the insurer to overstate its solvency position to the watchdog and the market.
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March 10, 2026
Courts Bill Progresses To Showdown Over Jury Trials
Lawmakers voted Tuesday to go ahead with the government's courts bill amid warnings from rebellious MPs that controversial parts of the legislation that would curtail jury trials were "unworkable, unpopular, unjust and unnecessary."
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March 10, 2026
Mining Billionaire's Shell Co. Fined €25.8M For Congo Bribery
A shell company of sanctioned Israeli billionaire Dan Gertler has paid €25.8 million ($30 million) to settle a long-running investigation into bribery of an official in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Dutch prosecutors said Tuesday.
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March 10, 2026
Odey 'Violated' Ethics Over Sex Misconduct Probe, FCA Says
Crispin Odey "repeatedly violated" ethical rules for those working in financial services by frustrating an internal investigation into his sexual misconduct, the Financial Conduct Authority told the first day of an appeal hearing on Tuesday.
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March 10, 2026
FRC Investigates Vistry Accountants Over Financial Forecasts
The U.K.'s accounting watchdog on Tuesday launched a probe into two former employees of Vistry in the wake of a £165 million ($222 million) miscalculation two years ago that cut into the homebuilder's profits.
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March 10, 2026
Lawyers March On Parliament To Fight For Jury Trials
Lawyers marched to Parliament on Tuesday to urge the prime minister to shelve plans to restrict jury trials in England and Wales, warning that it would undermine a fundamental safeguard of the justice system while doing little to reduce delays in courtrooms.
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March 10, 2026
UK Insurers' Body Backs 'United' Gov't Anti-Fraud Strategy
The Association of British Insurers said on Tuesday that it backed the "united approach" at the heart of the government's latest fraud strategy, which is designed to prevent the most common crime in the U.K.
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March 09, 2026
Investor Goes Back For Thirds In VietJet Lease Dispute
A subsidiary of an international private investment company said at a London court Monday that a Vietnamese budget airline should pay it further damages resulting from failing to return leased planes on time, resulting in lost rental income.
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March 09, 2026
Sony's £5B Market Abuse Trial Will Test Limit Of CPO Regime
A £5 billion ($6.7 billion) collective action against Sony opens on Tuesday in a trial that lawyers say will provide a crucial indication of how the Competition Appeal Tribunal will analyze claims of market abuse against Big Tech companies.
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March 09, 2026
Odey Trial To Test FCA's Personal Conduct Clampdown
Former hedge fund boss Crispin Odey will attempt to overturn his financial services ban on Tuesday, in a legal challenge that experts say will test the Financial Conduct Authority's ability to sanction executives for allegedly private conduct.
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March 09, 2026
FCA Proposes Crypto-Asset Rule Change To Avoid Overlap
The Financial Conduct Authority has proposed amendments to client rules to avoid obligations on crypto-asset activities that could overlap with requirements under the new digital regulatory regime.
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March 09, 2026
Home Office Sets Out Anti-Fraud Rule Changes For Crypto
The Home Office set out on Monday a plan to combat cryptocurrency and investment scams and money laundering by international financial crime groups, and said it will make regulatory changes.
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March 09, 2026
Police Unfairly Fired Worker With ADHD For Sexual Innuendos
A tribunal has held that the Metropolitan Police in London unfairly fired an employee for making jokes with sexual innuendos, ruling that the police gave "little weight" to his ADHD before deciding to sack him.
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March 08, 2026
Gov't Launches New Fraud Squad To Fight Online Scams
A new fraud squad designed to crack down on online fraud and overseas scam compounds will begin operations in April, drawing together expertise from law enforcement, the government, banks and big tech, the Home Office said on Sunday.
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March 06, 2026
Developer Accuses Banker Of Cruise Ship Port Takeover Plot
A Belizean businessman has accused a banker of orchestrating a conspiracy to take control of a project to construct a cruise ship port by demanding the repayment of loans and sending the building project into receivership.
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March 06, 2026
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen British American Tobacco sued by more than 100 investors, the government bring a claim against a COVID-19 supplier of personal protective equipment, Annington Funding sue its new corporate trustees on the Financial List, and Piers Morgan hit with a defamation claim from a pro-Israel barrister he interviewed on his YouTube channel.
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March 06, 2026
Italian Police Seize €2M In EU Tax Fraud Probe
Italian police seized almost €2 million ($2.3 million) in assets as part of an investigation into 12 people suspected of claiming European tax credits for fake energy projects, the European Public Prosecutor's Office confirmed Friday.
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March 06, 2026
FCA Disputes 'Unreasonable' Early Closure Of Probe
The Financial Conduct Authority has rejected a decision by the Complaints Commissioner that the watchdog unreasonably closed an investigation into unauthorized promoter Amyma for allegedly marketing unregulated bonds to consumers.
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March 06, 2026
Juryless Trials Won't Alter Law Commission Contempt Rules
An independent government legal adviser has said it is unnecessary to update its recent recommendations for reforms to the U.K.'s contempt of court rules in light of the government's plans to curtail jury trials.
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March 06, 2026
Medical Co. Boss Banned For Fake £10M NHS Contract Fraud
The head of a medical supplies business has been banned from being a company director for 13 years after he fabricated a £9.8 million ($13.1 million) NHS contract to dupe investors into handing over more than £2 million.
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March 05, 2026
Fintech Sues Deutsche Bank, Pathward Over Pharma Flags
A self-described barter-based payment platform sued Deutsche Bank AG and Pathward NA, alleging it was improperly placed on an industry blacklist following the banks' assertions it was "transaction laundering" for companies selling gray-market peptides.
Expert Analysis
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CMA App Store Mandates Fall Short Of Regulatory Ambitions
The Competition and Markets Authority's recent proposals to loosen Google and Apple’s mobile platform duopoly are a far cry from the assertive and wide-reaching interventions that advocates of the Digital Markets Unit had hoped to see from the new competition regulator, says Ronan Scanlan at Steptoe.
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Catching Up On Simplified EU Sustainability Disclosure Rules
A recent proposal to streamline implementation of the EU’s Taxonomy Regulation contains measures that would reduce companies’ sustainable investment reporting and compliance requirements, and better support the EU’s climate and environmental goals, say lawyers at Proskauer.
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Cos. Must Take Action As Corporate Enforcement Evolves
The Serious Fraud Office's renewed vigor toward proactive corporate enforcement, as evidenced by its recently affirmed commitment to collaboration with the U.S. on cross-border investigations, means that organizations must solidify their antibribery and corruption frameworks to remain ahead of fast-moving regulatory and legislative initiatives, say lawyers at Weil.
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UK Reforms Investment Rules, But Clarity Concerns Remain
The U.K. government’s recent reforms to the National Security and Investment Act 2021 demonstrate a continuing pragmatic approach by requiring fewer deal filings, but the regime would benefit from more clarity in key areas, say lawyers at McDermott.
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Fraud Law Puts Fund Managers Under Compliance Spotlight
The new failure to prevent fraud offense, effective Sept. 1, may not represent a material departure from most managers’ duties to exercise due care in preventing loss to the assets they manage, but the prospect of criminal liability should sharpen their compliance focus, says Andrew Henderson at Goodwin Procter.
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CMA Pricing Guide Signals Shift In UK Consumer Protection
The Competition and Markets Authority’s recent draft price transparency guide, as part of a wider reform introduced by the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024, represents a significant change in U.K. consumer protection by targeting unfair trading practices and strengthening enforcement mechanisms, says Felicity Forward at Shoosmiths.
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8 Compliance Team Strategies To Support Business Agility
Amid new regulatory requirements across the globe, compliance functions must design thoughtful guardrails that help business leaders achieve their commercial objectives lawfully — from repurposing existing tools to using technology thoughtfully — instead of defaulting to cumbersome protocols that hinder legitimate business, says Theodore Edelman at GCE Advisors.
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What To Note From FCA, Gov't Financial Growth Proposals
Recent Financial Conduct Authority and government proposals for financial services reform are positive developments for firms, signaling a drive to push forward growth and a willingness to be flexible in areas of regulation that the industry has long raised as barriers, say lawyers at Simmons & Simmons.
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How Accessibility Act Is Reshaping EU Digital Compliance
In adding binding requirements to digital spaces, the recently enacted European Accessibility Act aims to harmonize rules and promote digital inclusion across the EU, a departure from earlier frameworks that relied on voluntary standards for businesses, say lawyers at Greenberg Traurig.
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Opinion
Managers' Expanded Corp. Liability Proposal Is Too Vague
The Crime and Policing Bill 2025, currently under consideration by the House of Lords, implements a dramatic expansion of managers’ corporate liability in ambiguous provisions that may lead only to cumbersome and unintended consequences for companies, says Vanessa Reid at Corker Binning.
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What Gov't Report Tells Lawyers About Continuing AML Risks
The U.K. government’s recent national money laundering risk assessment maintains conveyancing, company service work and misuse of client accounts as key threats, underscoring that law firms should expect renewed scrutiny and higher expectations in these high-risk areas, says Harriet Holmes at Thirdfort.
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Russia Sanctions Spotlight: Strengthening Enforcement
The Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation’s proposed changes to its enforcement process by increasing monetary penalties, and introducing schemes to encourage cooperation, suggest that businesses should expect an expansion of financial sanctions enforcement, says Alexandra Melia at Steptoe.
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What EU GPAI Compliance Code Will Mean For Developers
The European Union recently released a code of practice to guide compliance for general purpose artificial intelligence models, offering early adopters regulatory deference, but posing timing concerns and significant costs burdens that may discourage smaller developers, say lawyers at Perkins Coie.
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How Top Court Ruling Limits Scope Of Motor Finance Claims
The U.K. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in a landmark case concerning car finance commissions clarifies when and how a dealership’s fiduciary duties arise, considerably narrowing that path for mass consumer litigation and highlighting how an upcoming Financial Conduct Authority redress scheme will seek to balance consumer, lender and market interests, say lawyers at Cadwalader.
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FCA Misconduct Guide Will Expand Firms' Duty To Investigate
The Financial Conduct Authority's recent proposals on workplace nonfinancial misconduct will place a greater onus on compliance and investigations teams, clarifying that the question to ascertain is whether the behavior is justifiable and proportionate, say lawyers at Ashurst.