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Pulse UK
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May 14, 2025
Squire Patton Adds To EY Law's Woes With 5-Lawyer Hire
Squire Patton Boggs LLP said Wednesday that it has hired a team of five specialists in financial regulation from EY's legal services arm in Britain, adding to the division's woes as it continues to go through a period of turbulence.
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May 06, 2025
India Stays Closed To UK Lawyers Despite New Trade Deal
The Law Society called the absence of legal services from the trade deal that the U.K. and India inked on Tuesday "a missed opportunity" to open up market access for lawyers from both countries, as India continues to block foreign lawyers from setting up shop.
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May 06, 2025
HSF Names Chair, Senior Partner Of New Transatlantic Firm
Herbert Smith Freehills LLP has named a leading Australian corporate lawyer as the senior partner of the new firm being established through its merger with New York's Kramer Levin due to complete in June.
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May 06, 2025
SRA OKs 1st AI Law Firm In Bid To Broaden Access To Justice
The solicitors' watchdog said Tuesday it has approved the first legal services provider powered entirely by an artificial intelligence large language model, rather than human lawyers, describing it as a significant step toward enhancing access to justice.
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May 06, 2025
Knights Continuing Expansion With £16.6M Birkett Long Buy
Knights Group Holdings PLC said Tuesday that it has struck a deal to acquire Birkett Long's law firm and financial advisory business for up to £16.6 million ($22.2 million) to continue its expansion in southeast England.
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May 06, 2025
Lewis Silkin Says Property Sale Advice Was Not Its Job
Lewis Silkin LLP said it was never hired to advise a developer on the sale of a former car dealership, denying his bid for up to £8.7 million ($11.6 million) in alleged losses from a rushed sale.
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May 06, 2025
Law Commission Sued For Bias Over Recruiting Test Aid Fail
An aspiring researcher for the Law Commission argued Tuesday that she should be able to sue the organization for disability discrimination after it declined to provide her with adjustments for her reduced vision during an online recruitment test.
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May 02, 2025
Law Firm Can't Ax €213M Action Over Claim Form Blunders
A London court ruled Friday that an asset manager can amend its €213 million ($241 million) professional negligence claim against the London arm of an international law firm, as it would be unjust to strike out the action merely because the claim form had been prepared with "a remarkable lack of care."
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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
A&O Shearman Ex-Partners Cite Leadership Gap Amid Exits
Partners are still heading for the exit at Allen Overy Shearman Sterling in London, prompting lawyers to note that the firm’s top decision-makers are not based in the U.K. Here, former partners talk about leadership and the growing emphasis on billable hours at the firm.
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May 02, 2025
The Revolving Door: Linklaters Hires Public Law Head
Over the past week, Linklaters hired a new arbitration partner to head its international law practice, Pinsent Masons bagged a pensions expert from Taylor Wessing, and Clyde & Co. opened its doors to an AI veteran from Kennedys Law.
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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
Excello Law Expands With Launch Of Boutique Firm
Excello Law has helped a corporate law specialist to launch a boutique firm in southwest England under a business model that gives entrepreneurial lawyers the resources they need to establish their own legal business.
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May 02, 2025
BCLP Is Latest Firm To Launch Redundancy Consultation
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP said Friday that it has launched a redundancy consultation that will affect approximately 8% of its global business services on both sides of the Atlantic as the firm pursues its "business modernization program."
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May 02, 2025
Ashurst Appoints Claire Dutch As London Office Chief
Ashurst LLP has appointed senior planning law specialist Claire Dutch to lead its office in London as she takes over from her predecessor, Helen Burton, who had held the position for two years.
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May 01, 2025
Kennedys Names 21 Partners In Bumper Promotion Round
Kennedys LLP announced Thursday that it had elevated 21 lawyers to partnership across nine of its offices, marking a 23% increase on the number it promoted in 2024.
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May 01, 2025
DLA Piper Names New Office Chief For Manchester, Liverpool
DLA Piper has appointed a corporate crime and investigations partner to oversee its offices in northwest England after his predecessor helped them overcome the challenges they faced during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and its aftermath.
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May 01, 2025
Keystone Law Nears Revenues Of £100M
Keystone Law Group PLC said Thursday that investing in senior lawyers has reaped dividends for the firm as it recorded revenues of almost £100 million ($133 million) and saw profits increase by double digits in its latest financial results.
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May 01, 2025
BNY Can't Escape A&O Shearman's £93M Negligence Claim
Bank of New York Mellon lost its fight Thursday to escape a claim from Allen Overy Shearman Sterling alleging that the lender caused Nationwide Building Society to face a £93 million ($109 million) tax bill by bungling the issuance of notes.
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May 01, 2025
Richard Susskind On What Attys Should Do In The Age Of AI
Author Richard Susskind, who has a new book out about artificial intelligence, discusses how legal institutions are not ready for AI and what it will take for lawyers to recognize their potential vulnerability to being replaced by it.
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May 01, 2025
Injury Lawyers 4U Defeats Law Firms' Case Over Ad Prices
Injury Lawyers 4U has beaten a case brought by three law firms in a fight over prices for TV advertising, with a court ruling that the company's directors were legitimately appointed before removing preferential ad rates.
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May 01, 2025
Ex-Solicitor Gets Prison For Pocketing £160K In Client Money
A former solicitor who duped more than 300 clients over three years into paying more than £160,000 ($213,000) into her personal bank account rather than to her firm has been jailed for two-and-a-half years, police have said.
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May 01, 2025
Osborne Clarke Promotes 10 To Partner, Addleshaw Adds 15
Osborne Clarke said Thursday that it has elevated 10 lawyers based in England to its partnership, a day after Addleshaw Goddard confirmed that it has boosted its numbers with a smaller intake of 15 new partners.
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April 30, 2025
DEI Champion Appointed Next City Law Society Chief Exec
The former head of learning at Linklaters LLP will take over as chief executive of the trade body for City of London law firms, the appointment of a long-time diversity and inclusion champion as big U.S. firms face pressure over DEI.
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April 30, 2025
Morgan Lewis Expands Tax Practice With Milbank Hire
Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP added a former Milbank special counsel as a tax partner based in the firm's London office.
Expert Analysis
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Legal Technology Is Likely To Flourish In The UK
The U.K. may soon surpass the U.S. in legal technology, thanks to regulatory reform, law firm investment and an entrepreneurial environment, says Bridget Deiters of InCloudCounsel.
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Law & Reorder: The Emergence Of The UK Legaltech Sector
Recent market dynamics are driving the U.K. legal industry to adopt nascent technologies in new service offerings as well as pre-existing solutions. The rise of legaltech should also lead to an increase in acquisitions by law firms striving to maintain relevance, says Jo Charles of Livingstone Partners LLP.
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Why English Courts Are Prepared To Assist Cyber Victims
This year, a number of cases have illustrated how English courts are dealing with legal hurdles for cybercrime victims and making it easier to obtain a freezing order or injunction under such circumstances, says Fiona Cain of Haynes and Boone LLP.
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Extradition To The United States: Fight Or Flight?
Recent extradition cases have demonstrated that individuals in the United Kingdom facing charges in the United States can either fight extradition proceedings tooth and nail, or voluntarily travel to the U.S. An approach carefully tailored to the facts of each case is required in order to best protect a requested person's interests, says Ben Isaacs of 7 Bedford Row.
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UK Internal Investigations Are Taking An Ungainly Turn
The London High Court's decision in Serious Fraud Office v. Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation has a lot to say on the vitality of legal professional privilege and the conduct of internal investigations in the U.K., but its flawed logic and lack of pragmatism feel like the latest installment in SFO Director David Green's pushback against U.S.-style investigation procedures, say Matthew Herrington and Tom Best of Steptoe & Johnson LLP.
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Once More Unto The Breach — Rehearing In Newman?
On Friday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York decided to seek appellate review of several aspects of the recent insider-trading decision in U.S. v. Newman and Chiasson. En banc rehearing petitions are rarely granted in any circuit, and are particularly rare in the Second Circuit, which hears the fewest number of rehearings of any circuit in the country, say Eugene Ingoglia and Gregory Morvillo of Morvillo LLP.
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UK Tax Advisers Are Beyond Legal Advice Privilege
A recent judgment from the U.K. Supreme Court in one of the most significant decisions on legal advice privilege for many years. Prudential PLC v. Special Commissioner of Income Tax, which dealt a blow to tax advisers and other nonlegally qualified service providers who provide legal advice to their clients, confirmed that — consistent with the position in the U.S. — legal advice privilege only protects communications to or from a qualified lawyer, say Richard Hornshaw and Daniel Cohen of Bingham McCutchen LLP.