Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • April 24, 2026

    FCA Leads Global Crackdown On Illegal 'Finfluencers'

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Friday that it has spearheaded a week of global action to stop illegal "finfluencers" who put consumers' money at risk.

  • April 24, 2026

    EU Sanctions 20 More Russian Banks, Crypto, Shipping

    The European Union said Friday that it has hit Russia with a fresh round of sanctions that target financial services, including cryptocurrency companies, as part of a broader package.

  • April 24, 2026

    Father Admits He Misled Sons Amid £5M Row Over Loan

    The father of two brothers accused of owing almost £5 million ($6.8 million) in outstanding payments on an investment loan has admitted that he misled them, but has denied liability for the lender's claimed loss.

  • April 23, 2026

    Tax Barrister Suspended After Failed Libel Claim

    A tax barrister has been suspended from practice until 2027, the bar regulator has said, following the failure of his £8 million ($10.8 million) libel claim against former Clifford Chance LLP partner Dan Neidle.

  • April 23, 2026

    UK Builder.ai Founder Charged In India Over Siphoned Funds

    Indian law enforcement has filed a criminal complaint against the founder of a failed, London-based artificial intelligence tech company, alleging he was "the key beneficiary" of millions of dollars siphoned off a defunct electronics manufacturer.

  • April 23, 2026

    HMRC Defends Court's Power To Resolve Exit Tax Dispute

    A U.K. tribunal didn't overstep its authority by interpreting legislation to allow taxpayers to pay an exit tax in deferred payment plans to comply with the European Union's rights to free establishment, HM Revenue & Customs argued Thursday.

  • April 23, 2026

    Fraud Claims Made Up 15% Of 2025 Court Filings, Report Says

    The number of fraud claims issued in England and Wales for 2025 remained proportionately high, with banking and financial services disputes dominating as the most common subject matter of those claims, according to industry analysis published Thursday.

  • April 23, 2026

    Criteo Unit Seeks £7.5M From Ex-Owners Over Alleged Fraud

    Internet ad broker BidSwitch has sued investors in a communications software provider that it acquired for £7.5 million ($10 million), accusing them of fraudulently inflating the financial position of the company, which led to millions of pounds in losses.

  • April 23, 2026

    WealthTek Clients To Get £19M Compensation From Adviser

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday that investment adviser Sapia Partners LLP has agreed to pay £19.6 million ($26.5 million) to clients of WealthTek, a wealth manager that has since collapsed, after failing to protect client money.

  • April 23, 2026

    Ex-RBS Banker Gets Prison For Soliciting £274K In Bribes

    A Scottish court has sentenced a former Royal Bank of Scotland banker to 21 months imprisonment for soliciting £274,000 ($370,000) in bribes from business clients while working in the bank's Global Restructuring Group in the wake of the 2010 financial crisis.

  • April 23, 2026

    BoE Pushes Banks To Combat Anthropic Mythos-Type AI Risk

    The Bank of England and UK Finance have warned banks and insurers to strengthen their cyber defenses by using artificial intelligence, in response to threats shown by emerging frontier AI models such as Anthropic's Mythos.

  • April 23, 2026

    Deripaska Sues Ex-Biz Partner Chernukhin In Ongoing Feud

    Oleg Deripaska has launched a new High Court claim against Vladimir Chernukhin, his former business partner, in the latest chapter of the long-running bitter legal feud between the two Russian oligarchs.

  • April 22, 2026

    Real Estate Co. Fights Exit Tax On £142M Over Legal Certainty

    A tribunal breached the principle of legal certainty in European Union law by ruling in favor of Britain's tax authority in a dispute over an exit tax on capital gains of £142 million ($192 million), a real estate investment company told a London court Wednesday.

  • April 22, 2026

    Class Rep Seeks To Revive £2.7B FX Claim As Opt-In Action

    A competition law consultant is fighting to relaunch a £2.7 billion ($3.65 billion) class action against major banks over alleged foreign exchange-rigging as an opt-in claim after a tribunal rejected it as an opt-out case.

  • April 22, 2026

    LC&F Solicitor Banned For Backdating Docs To Mislead FCA

    A solicitor found to have abetted a Ponzi scheme that siphoned off millions of pounds from British investors was banned from practicing on Wednesday after a disciplinary tribunal found that he had backdated documents to mislead auditors and regulators.

  • April 22, 2026

    FCA Leads 1st Raids On Illegal Crypto Traders

    The Financial Conduct Authority said Wednesday that it has led its first operation with other enforcement agencies to disrupt illegal peer-to-peer cryptocurrency trading in locations across London.

  • April 22, 2026

    Regulators Cut Burden On Senior Managers In Rule Changes

    The Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulatory Authority set out on Wednesday finalized reforms to the Senior Managers and Certification Regime that will reduce costs and increase flexibility for businesses.

  • April 22, 2026

    SFO Looks Toward Technology, AI Overhaul After Ephgrave

    The goal of the Serious Fraud Office to accelerate its investigations through intelligence-gathering and technology signals that the white-collar agency's new interim director will persist with plans put in place by predecessor Nick Ephgrave after his surprise exit earlier in April.

  • April 22, 2026

    FCA Faces Challenge Over Motor Finance Redress Formula

    A consumer organization said Wednesday that it will bring a legal challenge to review how the Financial Conduct Authority's £7.5 billion ($10 billion) motor finance redress system is calculated, the first time such a program has been tested.

  • April 22, 2026

    SFO Arrests 4 In Fraud Probe Into £4B Gov't Energy Scheme

    The Serious Fraud Office said it arrested four people on Wednesday in an investigation into a £4 billion ($5.4 billion) government-backed scheme designed to cut fuel poverty and slash carbon emissions.

  • April 21, 2026

    EU Adopts Anti-Corruption Law With 5% Turnover Fines

    The European Union gave the final go-ahead Tuesday to a new directive on combating corruption, with fines of up to 5% of world turnover or €40 million ($47 million), adding a potential aggravating factor if offenders are banks or law firms.

  • April 21, 2026

    SRA Fights Axiom Ince's £65M Fraud Oversight Claim

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority hit back at claims from the now-defunct Axiom Ince that it was negligent in failing to spot the firm's leaders' alleged misappropriation of £65 million ($87.7 million) in client money early on.

  • April 21, 2026

    SFO Commits To 'Business As Usual' Amid Director Change

    The top lawyer at the Serious Fraud Office signaled on Tuesday that it will be "business as usual" for enforcement despite the recent change in leadership at the white-collar agency — but disclosure remains its biggest challenge and must be improved.

  • April 21, 2026

    Payroll VAT Fraudsters Jailed For 22 Years

    Four directors of a payroll company were sentenced to more than 22 years in prison for a two-year £8.8 million ($11.9 million) value-added tax fraud scheme, HM Revenue and Customs said Tuesday.

  • April 21, 2026

    Ex-Oil Execs Say 'Dishonest' Asset Freeze Cost Them $1B

    Two former top executives at oil trader Arcadia told a court on Tuesday that a decadelong order freezing their assets in support of a meritless fraud claim prevented them from setting up a business that would have earned them more than $1.1 billion.

Expert Analysis

  • Google Win Illustrates Hurdles To Mass Data Privacy Claims

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    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.

  • What To Know About FCA's UK Listing Rules Proposal

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    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.

  • Opinion

    UK Gov't Needs To Take Action To Support Whistleblowing Bill

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    With a proposed Office of the Whistleblower Bill making its way through the U.K. Parliament, whistleblowing is starting to receive the attention it deserves, but the key to unlocking real change is for the government to take ownership of reform proposals and appoint an overarching whistleblowing champion, says Baroness Susan Kramer at the House of Lords.

  • Issues To Watch At ABA's Antitrust Spring Meeting

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    Attorneys at Freshfields consider the future of antitrust law and competition enforcement amid agency leadership changes and other emerging developments likely to dominate discussion at the American Bar Association's Antitrust Spring Meeting this week.

  • New UK Short Selling Rules Diverge From EU Regs

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    Although forthcoming changes to the U.K.’s short selling regulatory regime represent a welcome relaxation of restrictions and simplification of reporting processes, participants active in both the U.K. and EU markets will need to ensure compliance with two quite different sets of rules, says Ezra Zahabi at Akin.

  • How New EU Product Liability Directive Will Affect Tech And AI

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    While the European Union’s new defective product liability directive, effective from December 2026, primarily provides clarifications rather than significant changes, it reflects the EU's commitment to addressing consumer protection and accountability challenges presented by the digital economy and artificial intelligence, say lawyers at Latham.

  • What Latest FCA Portfolio Letter Means For Payments Firms

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    Charlotte Hill at Charles Russell discusses the Financial Conduct Authority’s recent portfolio letter to CEOs of payments firms, outlining the regulator’s expectations, and the steps that these companies may now need to take to ensure compliance and operational effectiveness.

  • ECB Guide Targets Harmonized Cyber Testing Approach

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    The European Central Bank’s recently updated guidance for testing organizational resilience against sophisticated cyberattacks is a significant step forward, highlighting the importance of a unified approach to financial sector cybersecurity and alignment with Digital Operational Resilience Act requirements, say Simon Onyons and Nebu Varghese at FTI Consulting.

  • Court Backlog Could Alter Work Safety Enforcement Priorities

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    While criminal prosecution remains the default course of action following the most serious workplace accidents, a record backlog of cases in the crown courts in England and Wales and safety regulators’ recognition of the need for change may allow for a more discerning approach, say lawyers at BCL Solicitors.

  • New CMA Powers Will Change Consumer Protection Regime

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    The Competition and Markets Authority’s imminent broadened powers to impose penalties on organizations for unethical or misleading practices are likely to transform the U.K.’s consumer protection regime, and may lead to a rise in private litigation and increased regulatory scrutiny, say lawyers at Morgan Lewis.

  • Opinion

    Prospects For New Fraud Prevention Prosecution Look Slim

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    With the Labour Party's inherited patchwork of Conservative Party corporate crime legislation for preventing fraud and corruption, the forthcoming Economic Crime Act’s failure to prevent fraud offense is unlikely to be successful in assisting prosecutors bring companies to justice, says Matthew Cowie at Rahman Ravelli.

  • What's Next After FCA Drops Troubled 'Name And Shame' Plan

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    A closer look at the Financial Conduct Authority's recent decision to toss its widely unpopular proposal changing the test for announcing enforcement investigations may reveal how we got here, why the regulator changed course, and where it’s headed next, say lawyers at Hogan Lovells.

  • What To Note In EU Tech Transfer Agreements Consultation

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    Robert Klotz at Steptoe explains the European Commission’s main contemplated amendments to a regulation that exempts certain technology transfer agreements from European Union restrictions, the current political context around the ongoing reform, and as its potential consequences for businesses.

  • 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.

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