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Corporate Crime & Compliance UK
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May 07, 2025
Lloyd's Broker Appears In Court On Ecuador Bribery Charges
A Lloyd's of London broker appeared in court Wednesday accused by the Serious Fraud Office of failing to prevent a U.S.-based intermediary from making corrupt payments in Ecuador in order to secure contracts worth $38 million.
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May 07, 2025
EU Watchdog To Advise Tightening Insider Dealing Rules
The EU markets watchdog specified on Wednesday in advice to the European Commission on insider dealing rules for companies listing shares that profit warnings must be disclosed immediately rather than delay until accounts are produced.
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May 07, 2025
Top UK Court Expands Fraud Liability In Carbon Credits Case
Britain's highest court ruled Wednesday that a major brokerage firm can be held liable for millions of pounds owed to Britain's tax collector from a carbon credits tax fraud, a decision that could expand the reach of insolvency proceedings.
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May 06, 2025
Cyber Agency Urges Retailers To Review Systems After Hacks
Britain's agency for online security matters is urging retailers to tighten their digital defenses amid speculation over cyberattacks against major local stores and discussions about hackers targeting IT help desks to reset passwords.
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May 06, 2025
Financial Complaints Skyrocket After Motor Finance Ruling
The U.K.'s financial complaints watchdog said Tuesday that it received more than 140,000 reports about financial businesses in the last six months of 2024, up almost 49% on the same period a year earlier, after a landmark ruling that requires motor finance lenders to disclose commissions.
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May 06, 2025
HSBC Settles Reporting Whistleblowing Fight With Ex-Exec
HSBC Bank PLC on Tuesday settled its dispute with a former senior employee who had accused the retail banking giant of firing him for making protected disclosures about the lender's alleged capital reporting failings.
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May 06, 2025
Money Laundering Surges To £377M In UK Amid Fall In Fraud
Money laundering was the biggest source of fraud and economic crime by value in the U.K. in 2024, with the average value of individual cases increasing 10-fold compared with 2023, a professional services firm reported Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
Marsh Blamed For $143M Loss On Greensill As Trial Opens
The investment firm White Oak said it would never have invested in a financial scheme set up by now-collapsed Greensill Capital if it had not relied on misleading statements provided by the insurance broker Marsh about its cover, the firm's lawyers said at the opening of an almost $143 million trial Tuesday.
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May 06, 2025
EU Watchdog Proposes New Rules For ESG Ratings Firms
The European Union's markets watchdog has proposed new rules for providers of ESG ratings in a move to prevent conflicts of interest and improve their disclosures.
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May 06, 2025
Greensill, Gupta Get 2027 Trial Date Over $400M Row
Administrators overseeing part of the collapse of Lex Greensill's empire will head to trial in October 2027 to seek $400 million from a Swiss insurance giant that has accused the financier and one of his major former clients, Sanjeev Gupta, of fraud.
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May 02, 2025
TikTok Chinese Data Transfers Draw €530M Irish Privacy Fine
Ireland's data protection regulator has hit TikTok with a €530 million ($600 million) penalty for allegedly failing to adequately protect EU users' personal data that it transferred to China, the regulator announced Friday.
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May 02, 2025
Santander Wins Bid To Narrow AML Whistleblower Allegations
Santander succeeded in trimming a former financial crime policy manager's employment claim on Friday, when a tribunal judge dismissed several whistleblowing allegations but refused to ax other claims that Santander argued the ex-employee had already unsuccessfully sought to advance.
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May 02, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen Premier League football club Newcastle United FC sue the owner of the land next to its stadium, Laurence Fox face a defamation claim by TV presented Narinder Kaur and a further sexual assault claim filed against actor Kevin Spacey.
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May 02, 2025
Windfarm Accuses Nexans Of Overpricing In £50M Cartel Trial
Companies behind an English windfarm have alleged that the Norwegian arm of power cable giant Nexans charged artificially high prices as a result of an anticompetitive cartel, in a trial in which they are claiming £49.8 million ($66.2 million) in damages.
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May 02, 2025
Senior E.ON, British Gas Staff Jailed For £2M Bribery Scheme
Two senior ex-employees of energy giants E.ON and British Gas have been handed prison sentences for accepting more than £2 million ($2.7 million) worth of bribes in exchange for commercial contracts.
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May 02, 2025
Ex-UN Judge Gets 6 Yrs For Forcing Woman To Work As Slave
A former United Nations judge was sentenced to more than six years in prison on Friday after being found guilty of modern slavery offenses, including forcing a woman to work as her maid and conspiring to violate U.K. immigration law, the Crown Prosecution Service said.
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May 02, 2025
FCA Proposes Curb On Purchase Of Crypto-Assets On Credit
The Financial Conduct Authority proposed on Friday to restrict how far cryptocurrency companies could go in allowing consumers to buy crypto-assets on credit, part of its planned regulatory regime for the sector.
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May 02, 2025
EY Can Reveal $9.7B Settlement At UAE Health Biz Fraud Trial
EY won an attempt on Friday to reveal a $9.66 billion settlement inked by a United Arab Emirates health care business and senior company officers accused of a $4 billion fraud as it defends itself against allegations it failed to stop the alleged wrongdoing.
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May 02, 2025
Govia Thameslink Loses Bid To Cross-Examine Class Rep
Britain's antitrust tribunal refused Govia Thameslink Railway Ltd. permission to cross-examine the campaigner representing rail passengers in a class action over allegedly unfair ticket prices, saying it was unpersuaded there has been "serious mismanagement" of the case.
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May 02, 2025
Draft UK Crypto-Regulations Facing Teething Troubles
The government's new crypto-assets regime will be unenforceable across borders and could deter fledgling companies from working in the country, meaning that the financial watchdog will face early challenges to its attempts to protect British consumers in a volatile global marketplace.
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May 02, 2025
Bank Sues Fintech Execs For Fraud Over £4M Investment
A German specialist property lender has sued the co-founders of a financial technology startup for £4.2 million ($5.6 million) in London over claims that the former investment bankers hid the fact they had obtained additional investment in their business prior to its collapse.
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May 02, 2025
Russell Brand In Court On Rape, Sexual Assault Charges
Former actor and comedian Russell Brand was granted bail as he appeared at a London court on Friday to face charges of rape, sexual assault and indecent assault.
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May 01, 2025
Janus Analyst Accused Of Insider Trading Denies Hiding Deals
Prosecutors dismissed a former Janus Henderson analyst's claim he had not disclosed trades allegedly made with insider information because he regarded his employer's trading compliance policies to be "window dressing," saying on Thursday that the "simple explanation" was that he had wished to keep them secret.
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May 01, 2025
5 More Things For Employers To Consider After Sex Ruling
The ruling in April by the U.K. Supreme Court on the legal definition of a woman will compel employers to rethink much more than who uses what toilet, lawyers say.
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May 01, 2025
ECB Says Consumers Ready To Avoid US Goods Over Tariffs
European consumers are prepared to avoid American goods for the long term, following the impact of tariffs imposed by the U.S. administration, according to a survey by the European Central Bank.
Expert Analysis
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Contractual Drafting Takeaways From Force Majeure Ruling
Lawyers at Cleary discuss the U.K. Supreme Court's recent judgment RTI v. MUR Shipping and its important implications, including how the court approached the apparent tension between certainty and commercial pragmatism, and considerations for the drafting of force majeure clauses going forward.
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Takeaways From Regulators' £61.6M Citigroup Trading Fine
Following the Financial Conduct Authority and Prudential Regulation Authority’s recent significant fining of Citigroup for its catastrophic trading error, and with more enforcement likely, institutions should update their controls and ensure system warnings do not become routine and therefore disregarded, says Abdulali Jiwaji at Signature Litigation.
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Factors For London Cos. To Consider If Adding US Listings
Recent reports of a continuing valuation gap between London and New York have resulted in some London-listed companies considering U.S. listings to gain an increased investor base, but with various obligations and implications involved in such a move, organizations should consider whether there is a real benefit from trading there, say lawyers at Winston & Strawn.
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Behind The Stagecoach Boundary Fare Dispute Settlement
The Competition Appeal Tribunal's recent rail network boundary fare settlement offers group action practitioners some much-needed guidance as it reduces the number of remaining parties' five-year dispute from two to one, says Mohsin Patel at Factor Risk Management.
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Assessing The Energy Act 2023, Eight Months On
Although much of the detail required to fully implement the Energy Act 2023 remains to be finalized, the scale of change in the energy sector is unprecedented, and with the U.K. prioritizing achieving net-zero, it is likely that developments will continue at pace, say lawyers at Paul Hastings.
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Decoding Arbitral Disputes: Spanish Judicial Oversight
The recent conviction of arbitrator Gonzalo Stampa underscores the critical importance of judicial authority in the realm of international arbitration in Spain, and emphasizes that arbitrators must respect the procedural frameworks established by Spanish national courts, says Josep Galvez at 4-5 Gray’s Inn.
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Opinion
Why Timing Makes UK Libor Judgments Controversial
The recent U.K. Court of Appeal decision in the R v. Hayes and Palombo appeal against Libor convictions demonstrates that had U.K. regulators probed with the facts known today, civil claims in all jurisdictions would be dismissed and a decadelong wasted investigation should be put to rest, says Charles Kuhn at Clyde & Co.
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Tips For Orgs Using NDAs In Light Of New UK Legislation
The recent passage of the Victims and Prisoners Act follows a crackdown on the misuse of nondisclosure agreements, but although NDAs are not prohibited and regulators recognize their legitimate justification, organizations relying on them must be able to clearly explain that justification if challenged, say attorneys at Macfarlanes.
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Comparing UK, EU Digital Products Cybersecurity Approaches
New U.K. and EU legislation impose different cybersecurity requirements on manufacturers of connectable products, but despite its higher overall standard and holistic approach, organizations should be aware that compliance with the EU act does not necessarily mean satisfying the U.K. regime, says Christopher Foo at Ropes & Gray.
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Lessons From Epic's Dutch Fine For Unfair Marketing To Kids
Dutch regulators' imposition of a €1.1 million fine on Epic Games for unfair commercial practices targeting children marks a significant moment in the ongoing scrutiny of digital market practices, and follows an increased focus on children's online safety in the U.S. and European Union, say attorneys at Crowell & Moring.
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Risks And Promises Of AI In The Financial Services Industry
Generative artificial intelligence has immense potential to revolutionize the financial services industry, but firms considering its use should first prepare to show their customers and the increasingly divided international regulatory community that they can manage the risks inherent to the new technology, say attorneys at Gibson Dunn.
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EU Anti-Greenwashing Guide Analyzed For Fund Managers
Anna Maleva-Otto and Matthew Dow at Schulte Roth explain how the European Securities and Markets Authority’s new guidelines on sustainability-related terms in fund names aim to protect European Union investors from unsubstantiated claims, and how they provide quantifiable criteria for determining which terms can be used to promote their funds.
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FCA 'Finfluencer' Trial Exposes Social Media Promo Risks
The upcoming Financial Conduct Authority prosecution of nine individuals for Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 violations is the first time an online influencer will be tried for using social media to promote investments, demonstrating the need to be wary of the specific legal requirements surrounding financial product promotion, says David Claxton at Red Lion.
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Appeal Ruling Clarifies 3rd-Party Contract Breach Liability
The Court of Appeal's recent decision in Northamber v. Genee World serves as a warning to parties that they may be held liable for inducing another party to breach a contract, even if that party was a willing participant, say Neil Blake, Maura McIntosh and Jennifer O'Brien at HSL.
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How Law Firms Can Handle Challenges Of Mass Claims
With a wave of volume litigation possibly about to hit the U.K. courts, firms developing mass claim practices should ensure they heed the Solicitors Regulation Authority's May warning and adopt strategies to ensure regulatory compliance and fair client representation, says Claire Van der Zant at Shieldpay.