Corporate Crime & Compliance UK

  • November 18, 2025

    SFO To Move Headquarters To Canary Wharf In 2026

    The U.K.'s white-collar crime agency said on Tuesday that it will move its headquarters to Canary Wharf in 2026 as it stressed that the new location in east London will help it meet the challenges of investigating serious fraud and corruption.

  • November 18, 2025

    Mike Lynch's Estate Seeks To Challenge HP Fraud Judgment

    Mike Lynch's estate asked a London court on Tuesday for permission to appeal against a judgment that found he had defrauded Hewlett Packard Enterprise, attacking a ruling that an entity set up to buy the technology entrepreneur's company was misled.

  • November 18, 2025

    Ex-Mishcon Client's Contempt Of Court Bid Challenged

    A London judge challenged a former client of Mishcon de Reya LLP who alleges that the firm's lawyers gave false statements to court, telling her Tuesday that she has put forward no simple or straightforward charge of contempt of court.

  • November 18, 2025

    Seismic Tech Co. Güralp Says SFO Missed DPA's Deadline

    A seismic technology company urged London judges on Tuesday to rule that it had not breached its corporate bribery settlement agreement with the Serious Fraud Office, arguing that the agency had missed its deadline.

  • November 18, 2025

    EU Targets Financial Cyber Risks With New IT Provider Rules

    The three financial watchdogs of the European Union named on Tuesday the designated third-party providers of critical information and communication technology for finance companies, which it will regulate directly.

  • November 18, 2025

    Kuwaiti Pension Chief's Heirs Fight To Avoid $1B Fraud Debt

    The children of a former Kuwaiti pensions fund director told an appeals court on Tuesday that they should not be held liable for their now-dead father's alleged $1 billion fraud debt, arguing that successors outside the English jurisdiction cannot be forced to pay.

  • November 17, 2025

    SAP Proposes Fixes Amid EU Antitrust Probe

    German software giant SAP has offered a set of commitments to European enforcers who raised concerns over maintenance and support services for the company's business management software.

  • November 17, 2025

    Solicitor Faces Tribunal Over Allegations Of Misleading Client

    A criminal defense solicitor fought allegations in a London disciplinary tribunal Monday that he had instructed a client to falsely deny allegations of corruption and to fabricate a narrative for their high-profile trial.

  • November 17, 2025

    TotalEnergies, Partners Fined €187M For Fuel Depot Collusion

    A French competition regulator revealed Monday that it has imposed fines totaling almost €187.5 million ($217.4 million) against the owners of Corsican oil depots, including fuel giant TotalEnergies, for colluding to reserve the use of the only two fuel stores on the Mediterranean island for themselves.

  • November 17, 2025

    Trafigura Accuses Gupta Of $600M Sham Nickel Trade At Trial

    Trading company Trafigura told the High Court on Monday that Prateek Gupta and his companies defrauded it out of $600 million in a sham nickel trade, opening a long-awaited trial over Trafigura's purchase of purported nickel shipments that turned out to be "worthless."

  • November 17, 2025

    Fugitive Can't Appeal Extradition For 5-Year Fraud Sentence

    A fugitive sentenced to more than five years in prison for fraud can't appeal his extradition to Italy, as a court ruled Monday that the decision correctly weighed up the public interest in him serving time against the difficulties his family would face.

  • November 17, 2025

    Fraudulent Insurance Claims Continue To Top £1B A Year

    Fraudulent claims in the U.K. general insurance sector rose again in 2024, with those linked to motor cover driving much of the increase, the Association of British Insurers warned on Monday.

  • November 17, 2025

    Hacker Ordered To Forfeit £4M In Crypto After Twitter Heist

    A London court has ordered an aspiring web developer to pay back £4.1 million ($5.4 million) worth of cryptocurrency after he was convicted of hacking high-profile Twitter accounts and money laundering in the U.S.

  • November 14, 2025

    Italian Police Seize Assets In €260M VAT Fraud Probe

    Italian financial police seized corporate assets Friday as part of an investigation into a criminal ring suspected of evading €260 million ($302 million) in value-added taxes on fuel, European Union authorities said.

  • November 14, 2025

    Trafigura's $600M Fraud Trial To Test Metals-Trading Practices

    Metals magnate Prateek Gupta will face trial in London on Nov. 17 over allegations that he and his companies perpetrated "systematic fraud" against Trafigura, with the trading company alleging that Gupta cheated it out of $600 million in a nickel fraud scheme.

  • November 14, 2025

    Billionaire Used Spy To Extract Privileged Info From Solicitor

    Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego used a private intelligence agent to dupe a law firm partner into divulging privileged and confidential information about a man Salinas claims defrauded him out of more than $415 million, a London court has found.

  • November 14, 2025

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen Freeths face a professional negligence claim from a Scottish car dealership, Rolls-Royce sue logistics giant Kuehne + Nagel, and a team of Oberon Investments Group investment managers sued by their former employer.  

  • November 14, 2025

    VietJet Avoids Criminal Contempt Claim In Aircraft Dispute

    A subsidiary of an international private investment company cannot pursue a Vietnamese budget airline for contempt of court, after the Court of Appeal held Friday the airline cannot be criminally liable for conduct not prohibited by an injunction protecting the company's aircraft.

  • November 14, 2025

    EU Court Upholds Sanctions On Relative Of Syria's Assad

    A second cousin of former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad has lost a bid to lift sanctions against him as the European Union's top court rejected his argument that the bloc's decision to sanction him on the grounds of his family connection was unfair.

  • November 14, 2025

    EU To Boost Cooperation Among Enforcers To Fight Tax Fraud

    The European Union pledged on Friday to bolster its fight against massive tax fraud that costs approximately €89 billion ($103 billion) across the bloc each year by rolling out a plan to deepen cross-border cooperation.

  • November 14, 2025

    How Mishcon Helped Uncover £5.6B Money Laundering Plot

    Law360 examines here how a suspicious activity report raised by Mishcon de Reya about a client's attempted transactions served as the catalyst for one of the biggest cryptocurrency seizures in British history.

  • November 14, 2025

    Denmark Has Until Dec. 12 To Appeal £1.4B Cum-Ex Defeat

    Denmark has 28 days to try to revive its £1.4 billion ($1.8 billion) case over a tax fraud allegedly orchestrated by convicted hedge fund trader Sanjay Shah, a judge said Friday as he gave full reasons for refusing permission to appeal.

  • November 14, 2025

    BHP Found Liable In £36B Brazil Dam Collapse Case

    BHP can be held liable in a £36 billion ($47 billion) claim for the collapse of a dam in Brazil that triggered the country's worst environmental crisis, a High Court judge ruled Friday, handing a major win to lawyers representing more than 640,000 individuals.

  • November 13, 2025

    Trump To Pardon UK Billionaire Lewis For Insider Trading

    President Donald Trump has agreed to pardon 88-year-old British billionaire Joseph Lewis, who was sentenced to three years of probation for feeding nonpublic stock tips to his girlfriend and private-jet pilots.

  • November 13, 2025

    Carter-Ruck Test Case Could Redefine SRA's Privilege Rights

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority is facing an unprecedented court challenge from Carter-Ruck to its power to force law firms to hand over privileged documents, a case that could embolden clients to refuse consent far more frequently and force legislative reform.

Expert Analysis

  • Court Backing Of FCA Pensions Ruling Sends Key Message

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    The Upper Tribunal’s recent upholding of the Financial Conduct Authority's decisions against CFP Management directors serves as a judicial endorsement of the regulator’s approach to defined benefit transfers, underscoring that where the advisory model is fundamentally flawed, the consequences for those in control can be severe, say lawyers at RPC.

  • What To Note As UK Adopts OECD Crypto Disclosure Rules

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    With the U.K.’s recent announcement that it will adopt the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's crypto-asset reporting framework, users and providers will benefit from understanding the context surrounding the decision and the framework's intended goal of clamping down on tax evasion, say lawyers at Brown Rudnick.

  • Why UK Sanctions Review Recommendations Lack Substance

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    The recent U.K. cross-government sanctions enforcement review makes welcome but unambitious recommendations, and without increasing funding for sanctions agencies or developing a whistleblower incentivization scheme, it is unlikely to result in tangible support for the sectors that most need it, say lawyers at WilmerHale.

  • How UK Law Firms Can Counter Money Laundering Threat

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    With figures released in May showing that money laundering was the biggest source of fraud in the U.K. last year, law firms should focus on internal identification and prevention strategies, considering the scale and nature of potential risk exposure depends on several business factors, says Niall Hearty at Rahman Ravelli.

  • Key Takeaways As EU And UK Impose New Russia Sanctions

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    The European Union and U.K.’s new sanctions on Russia, designating increasing numbers of non-Russian companies in the defense and shipping sectors, mean that organizations must examine from the outset whether a transaction has any nexus with the EU or the U.K., say lawyers at Sullivan & Cromwell.

  • 8 Ways Law Firms Can Prepare For SRA's AML Offensive

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    The Solicitors Regulation Authority’s recent plans to intensify anti-money laundering enforcement means firms need to concentrate on strengthening client matter risk assessments, policies and procedures, source of funds checks and firmwide risk assessments, says Harriet Holmes at Thirdfort.

  • How Unfair Practice Rules Boost Consumer Protections

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    With the consumer protection aspects of the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act now in force, companies must not only ensure their business is not engaged in prohibited practices, but also consider how consumers make decisions to acquire goods and services, say lawyers at Linklaters.

  • Fraud Office Guidance Highlights Value Of Self-Reporting

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    New guidance from the U.K.'s Serious Fraud Office on corporate self-reporting, cooperation and deferred prosecution agreements provides a useful framework for companies navigating criminal investigations and their potential resolutions — and underscores that corporations that self-report are in a better position to obtain DPAs than those that do not, say lawyers at Skadden.

  • Answering Key Questions About 2 EU Cybersecurity Laws

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    As companies work to implement two nascent European Union cybersecurity measures, the Digital Operational Resilience Act and the second Network and Information Security Directive, lawyers at MoFo address nine conceptual questions emerging around their interpretation and compliance obligations.

  • Industry Input Is Key As EU Weighs New Tariffs On US Trade

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    The European Commission’s ongoing consultation, which seeks feedback on a proposed expansion of products subject to tariffs and restrictions in retaliation to U.S. tariffs, opens an important opportunity for industry stakeholders to highlight why a scope exclusion is warranted, say lawyers at Crowell & Moring.

  • What End of Payment Systems Regulator Means For Biz

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    The U.K. government’s plan to abolish the Payment Systems Regulator and absorb its functions into the Financial Conduct Authority should eventually lighten the compliance burden for businesses under the PSR’s remit, which may in turn encourage growth, but the proposed changes will roll out slowly, say lawyers at Farrer & Co.

  • Compliance Lessons From Art Dealer's Terror Financing Plea

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    Regulated businesses can learn from the missteps of a recently convicted London art dealer, who failed to disclose sales to a suspected Hezbollah financier, by implementing compliance measures like anti-terrorism financing screenings as robust as their anti-money laundering policies and training staff to spot red flags, say lawyers at White & Case.

  • UK Capital Reforms May Help Startup Founders, VC Investors

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    Hidden in the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority's recent proposals on the definition of capital for investment firms are changes to the eligibility requirements for instruments to be included in a firm's regulatory capital — changes that may reduce the risk of investing, especially in early-stage fintech firms, says Andrew Henderson at Goodwin.

  • EU Watchdog's ESG Dashboard Raises Transparency Bar

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    The European Banking Authority’s recently introduced ESG dashboard is a key tool in aligning financial institutions with the European Union's sustainability policies, and fundamentally alters the risk environment by transitioning climate-related data from a compliance afterthought to a core component of strategic decision-making, says Kristýna Tupá at Schönherr.

  • Whistleblower Rewards May Soon Materialize In UK

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    Recent government and Serious Fraud Office announcements indicate that the U.K.’s long-standing aversion to rewarding whistleblowers is reversing, underlining the importance for organizations to consider managing misconduct risk and prepare for a potentially significant uptick in tipoffs, says Tom Grodecki at Cadwalader.

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