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February 02, 2026
A solicitor made reports to international security agencies accusing his former clients of evading sanctions and trading with terrorists because of a dispute over unpaid fees, the Solicitors Regulation Authority told a tribunal Monday.
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February 02, 2026
The captain of a cargo ship was convicted of gross negligence manslaughter on Monday after failing to take action to prevent a crash between two ships in the North Sea which led to an explosion and the death of a crew member.
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February 02, 2026
A broadcasting equipment company has denied that it is liable to Lloyds Bank PLC and Bank of Scotland PLC if the lenders are found to have wrongly processed payments linked to an alleged £1.3 billion ($1.8 billion) fraud.
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February 02, 2026
Campaigner Doreen Lawrence told a trial on Monday that she felt "violated" when she was told that the publisher of the Daily Mail had spied on her unlawfully while it publicly supported her family's efforts to secure justice for her murdered son.
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February 02, 2026
EY has settled a £2 billion ($2.73 billion) claim in London over its allegedly negligent auditing of collapsed health giant NMC Health and its failure to spot major fraud by shareholders at the hospital operator.
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February 02, 2026
The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal ruled Monday that a Carter-Ruck partner can in principle recover costs from the industry regulator after she was cleared of disciplinary charges linked to the OneCoin cryptocurrency scam, but said that the High Court should decide how much.
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January 30, 2026
A London Employment Tribunal has ruled that a financial technology payment startup unfairly dismissed its chief technology officer, but did not do so for the disclosures he made amid a souring relationship with the company's chief executive that led to an attempted boardroom coup.
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January 30, 2026
This past week in London saw collapsed solar bonds company Rockfire Capital sue the Royal Bank of Scotland, e-ticket platform Eventbrite target the owners of Salford Red Devils rugby club over an alleged contract breach, and Scottish distiller William Grant & Sons square off against a former MP in a trademark tussle tied to its Glenfiddich whisky.
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January 30, 2026
Trading company Trafigura was the victim of a "massive fraud" carried out by Prateek Gupta and his companies in which he made $500 million in sham nickel trades, a London court concluded on Friday.
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January 30, 2026
The Financial Conduct Authority proposed to replace its climate disclosure rules on Friday for companies listed on the London Stock Exchange, under a new regime aligned with international standards.
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January 30, 2026
The sanctions enforcer plans to introduce higher maximum fines and a new settlement scheme as part of a wave of reforms aimed at keeping pace with the increased volume and complexity of its investigations.
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January 29, 2026
The U.K.'s public spending watchdog urged the Ministry of Defence on Friday to create a single body that brings together the department's counter-fraud and police teams to better investigate economic crime.
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January 29, 2026
Diezani Alison-Madueke did not abuse her position as a Nigerian petroleum minister by accepting "lavish" gifts from oil executives as the cash, car rides and luxury accommodation were later reimbursed, her lawyer told jurors in London on Thursday.
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January 29, 2026
The former chief executive of London Capital & Finance PLC and his wife admitted on Thursday to breaching a court order imposed during an investigation into the £237 million ($326.8 million) collapse of the company, the Serious Fraud Office said.
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January 29, 2026
The watchdog for miscarriages of justice referred the convictions of five former Barclays traders back to the Court of Appeal on Thursday after concluding that the legal errors which led the country's highest court to overturn historical Libor and Euribor prosecutions also undermined their cases.
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January 29, 2026
The Financial Conduct Authority has joined forces with the sanctions policing body, law enforcement agencies and regulators in an information-sharing initiative to tackle the abuse of crypto assets and money laundering.
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January 29, 2026
A local council in England has agreed to a settlement in its £20 million ($28 million) claim against a regulatory host over allegedly fraudulent misrepresentations that led the now essentially bankrupt authority to invest in high-risk bonds.
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January 29, 2026
German prosecutors confirmed on Thursday that they are investigating Deutsche Bank AG for suspected money laundering activity linked to foreign businesses.
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January 29, 2026
Howard Kennedy LLP has successfully defeated a former client's challenge to a legal bill of almost £196,000 ($270,000) racked up in connection with Financial Conduct Authority proceedings, as a London court ruled that the man was made aware of the costs.
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January 28, 2026
A Belarusian construction company urged a London appellate court Wednesday to overturn a decision upholding the U.K. Foreign Office's imposition of economic sanctions on it, arguing that it no longer benefited from or supported the republic's government in Minsk.
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January 28, 2026
More than 120 lawyers and other representatives of civil society called on Wednesday for the government to include provisions in the next King's Speech for tackling strategic legal claims designed to gag reporting and silence criticism.
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January 28, 2026
The Advertising Standards Authority banned adverts by Britain's largest crypto-asset exchange on Wednesday, saying that they trivialize the risk of cryptocurrency investing by implying it could be an alternative to cost-of-living concerns.
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January 28, 2026
Diezani Alison-Madueke threatened to expose the oil tycoons who had showered her with lavish gifts after hearing rumors of a plot to "sink" her, vowing to "escort all of you to jail along with myself," prosecutors told a London court on Wednesday.
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January 28, 2026
The Financial Conduct Authority is facing calls from legal experts for it to plug gaps in its rules that could leave senior managers on the hook for failings in artificial intelligence under existing accountability regulations.
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January 27, 2026
UBS AG has asked a Connecticut state court to throw out former trader Tom Hayes' lawsuit that alleges the bank scapegoated him for Libor-rigging, arguing the case doesn't belong in the state and improperly seeks to punish the bank for cooperating with prosecutors.