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Pulse UK
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July 22, 2025
Macfarlanes Turnover Grows To £371M Despite 'Muted' Market
Macfarlanes said Tuesday that its latest financial results show that it has recorded more than £371 million ($500 million) in turnover and posted a rise in profit and partner profits, despite facing a slower market.
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July 22, 2025
Linklaters Posts Record £2.3B Revenue Driven By US Growth
Linklaters said Tuesday that its revenue has climbed to a record total of just over £2.3 billion ($3.1 billion) and that profits have also reached an all-time high, driven by 57% growth in the U.S.
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July 21, 2025
Baker McKenzie Ups NQ Salaries In London To £145K
Baker McKenzie said Monday it has raised the salaries of newly qualified solicitors in its London office to £145,000 ($195,796), joining a cohort of top firms competing to attract and retain junior talent amid a tight legal recruitment market.
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July 21, 2025
Ex-Union Lawyer Loses Claim Job Lost Over Whistleblowing
A former solicitor for the National Education Union has lost her claim that she was fired for raising concerns about its insurance cover, as an employment tribunal ruled she was actually dismissed for refusing to work.
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July 28, 2025
Disputes Pro Joins Lewis Silkin From Rosenblatt
A Rosenblatt Law Ltd. commercial litigation expert with extensive experience in the banking sector has jumped to Lewis Silkin LLP as a partner in its London dispute resolution practice.
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July 21, 2025
MPs Call For Review To Fix 'Dysfunctional' County Courts
U.K. parliamentarians called on Monday for an "urgent and comprehensive, root-and-branch" review of the County Court system after a scathing report warned of unacceptable levels of delays, rat infestations in buildings and outdated operations. Â
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July 21, 2025
Linklaters Workers Banned For Falsifying Overtime Hours
The Solicitors Regulation Authority has sanctioned three people who were employed by Linklaters LLP's business support division after they deliberately claimed overtime for hours they had not worked.
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July 21, 2025
Barrister Loses Appeal Over Disbarment For Dishonesty
A barrister who supervised an unregistered immigration advice firm and lied to his regulator about it failed to overturn his disbarment, as a judge held Monday that the sanction was "clearly appropriate."
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July 21, 2025
Pinsent Masons Appoints Former CMA Chief To Board
Pinsent Masons said Monday that it has appointed the former chair of the Competition and Markets Authority as one of two new external board members, taking the overall number of representatives to nine.
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July 21, 2025
Charles Russell Speechlys' Firmwide Revenue Tops £240M
Charles Russell Speechlys said Monday that revenue across the firm has increased by a double-digit figure to more than £240 million ($323 million), fueled by a strong performance by the business across the globe.
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July 20, 2025
LexisNexis Launches AI Assistant 'Protégé' In the UK
LexisNexis announced on Monday the U.K. launch of an assistant that uses advanced artificial intelligence technology to help lawyers carry out legal tasks quickly and efficiently, enabling them to focus on higher-value client work.
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July 20, 2025
Tech Startup CaseCraft.AI Launches Small Claims Platform
Legal technology startup CaseCraft.AI said Monday that it has launched an AI-powered platform to streamline the litigation process for small claims for individuals and businesses.
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July 18, 2025
BigLaw's Two-Tier Model Risks Widening Gender Disparities
More BigLaw firms are adopting two-tier partnership models, prompting legal industry experts to warn that the non-equity track risks becoming a "parking lot" for women — potentially entrenching gender disparities at the top of the profession.
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July 18, 2025
The Revolving Door: Ashurt's M&A Co-Head Joins Cooley
Over the past week, Cooley hired Ashurst’s tech M&A co-head, Cadwalader added a leveraged finance expert from Paul Hastings, and Latham & Watkins brought in a private equity heavyweight from White & Case. Here, Law360 looks at those and more of the week's most notable lateral hires around the U.K...
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July 18, 2025
UK Law Firm Mills & Reeve Fills New AI-Focused Role
London-headquartered law firm Mills & Reeve this week promoted one of its construction attorneys to a newly created role focused on artificial intelligence.
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July 18, 2025
SRA Ends Probe After Fieldfisher Pro Lied About Assault
The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Friday that it won't be taking any further action after a former senior associate at Fieldfisher LLP was fired following "deliberate false evidence" by a female colleague that he sexually assaulted her in a toilet at a work event.
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July 18, 2025
Irwin Mitchell Can't Escape Costs In Pension Fraud Claim
Irwin Mitchell LLP failed on Friday to recover costs after it persuaded a London court that it had been wrongly named in a retired naval officer's negligence claim because its broader effort to throw out the case fell short.
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July 18, 2025
Paralegal's Bias Claims Tossed Over 'Unreasonable' Conduct
A paralegal's employment claims against a law firm and legal recruiter have been thrown out, after a judge concluded Friday that her conduct in the proceedings is so unreasonable it's impossible to have a fair hearing.
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July 18, 2025
SRA Cuts Compensation Fund Fees, Solicitors Save £1
The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Friday that the overall cost of practicing for individual solicitors will fall by £1 ($1.34) in the coming year, due to a growing number of solicitors on the roll and a reduction in payments from the watchdog's compensation fund.
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July 18, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen the former owner of British oil refinery Prax Group sued following the collapse of his business empire, a unit of Shard Credit Partners target a married couple believed to have inflated the value of their companies before selling them, and Aerofoil Energy reignite patent action against AFE Group over the design of its F1-inspired cooling units.
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July 17, 2025
Fieldfisher Plans Relocation To New Office In Birmingham
Fieldfisher LLP said Thursday it is moving to a new location in Birmingham, England, and that it intends to double its headcount there as it continues to pursue a strategy to become "Europe's leading law firm."
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July 17, 2025
UK Risk Report Flags Persistent Money Laundering Threat
Money laundering risk for British firms remains high as criminal cash is being generated at over £12 billion ($16.1 billion) a year, with financial and legal services deemed particularly vulnerable, according to the government's National Risk Assessment 2025 released Thursday.
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July 17, 2025
Fountain Court KC Was Victim Of 5-Year Stalking Campaign
A man who bombarded a Fountain Court barrister with unwanted explicit messages for nearly five years and showed up at her chambers admitted in court on Thursday to stalking her.
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July 17, 2025
Dechert Settles Jordanian Lawyers' UAE Torture Claims
Dechert and Neil Gerrard, its former head of white collar crime, have settled claims of torture and hacking in a web of litigation spawned from the firm's work for a UAE sovereign wealth fund, a spokesperson for the outfit confirmed Thursday.
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July 17, 2025
DAC Beachcroft's £348M Milestone Sets Stage For New Leader
DAC Beachcroft said Thursday that it has posted record revenue of just under £350 million ($467 million), while profits and partner profits have also hit an all-time high before its first leadership change in a decade.
Expert Analysis
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Translating The Plan For English-Language German Courts
The German Ministry of Justice is aiming to do away with the mistakes of the past and overhaul the German civil procedure in order to accommodate English-language disputes, but the success of these proceedings will depend very much on factors that the proposal does not address, say Jan Schaefer and Rüdiger Morbach at King & Spalding.
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A Breakdown Of The SRA's Proposed New Fining Powers
Thanks to the Solicitors Regulation Authority's pending new fining framework, which includes guidance on unsuitable fines and a fixed penalties scheme for low-level breaches, firms can expect to see more disciplinary findings leading to an SRA fine rather than referral to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, say Graham Reid and Shanice Holder at RPC.
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Russian Bank Ruling Clarifies UK Sanctions Regime
The recent U.K. High Court judgment of PJSC National Bank Trust v. Mints, a case brought by two Russian banks, is significant in clarifying that the U.K. sanctions regime does not deprive designated persons of their fundamental common law right to bring a claim in an English court, despite their assets being frozen, says Zoe O’Sullivan KC at Serle Court.
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Preparing For EU's Pay Gap Reporting Directive
An agreement has been reached on the European Union Pay Transparency Directive, paving the way for gender pay gap reporting to become compulsory for many employers across Europe, introducing a more proactive approach than the similar U.K. regime and leading the way on new global standards for equal pay, say attorneys at Lewis Silkin.
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Has The Liberalization Of Legal Services Achieved Its Aims?
Although there is still some way to go, alternative business structures are now an increasingly prominent feature of the legal services landscape, and clients can expect greater choice, improved quality and more manageable costs, as was intended by this shake-up of the profession's regulatory frameworks 15 years ago, says Dana Denis-Smith at Obelisk Support.
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How Overseas Property Verification Poses Risks To Attorneys
The recently launched register of overseas entities, requiring verification of foreign owners hoping to purchase U.K. property, could expose attorneys to criminal prosecution, professional negligence claims and reputational damage if they do not complete these checks to the required standard, which nevertheless remains murky, says Harriet Holmes at Thirdfort.
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What To Expect From UK's New Economic Crime Bill
The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency bill, if passed, will reform aspects of Companies House and strengthen government anti-money laundering efforts, but it is also raising questions about how new information sharing requirements will affect businesses, say attorneys at Signature Litigation.
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A Trusted Cybersecurity Framework Is Imperative For Lawyers
The recent increased risk of cyberattacks has a number of profound implications for law firms, and complying with government guidance by embedding a cyber-savvy culture and adhering to a security framework will enable lawyers to add extra layers of defense and present their clients with higher levels of protection, says Marion Stewart at Red Helix.
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Opinion
Law School Admissions Shouldn't Hinge On Test Scores
The American Bar Association recently granted law schools some latitude on which tests it can consider in admissions decisions, but its continued emphasis on test scores harms student diversity and is an obstacle to holistic admissions strategies, says Aaron Taylor at AccessLex.
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New FCA Listing Rules May Start Regulatory Shift On Diversity
Listed companies that fail to meet new Financial Conduct Authority rules for minimum executive board diversity currently risk reputational damage mainly through social scrutiny, but should prepare for potential regulatory enforcement actions, say attorneys at King & Spalding.
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What UK Professional Regulation Looks Like In A #MeToo Era
Two recent rulings from U.K. courts and tribunals reveal the increasingly shifting line between professional misbehavior and bad actions that would previously have been considered outside the scope of professional regulators, says Andrew Katzen at Hickman & Rose.
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How Immune Are State Agents From Foreign Courts?
The ongoing case of Basfar v. Wong is the latest to raise questions about the boundary between commercial or private activity and the exercise of sovereign authority that shields state agents from foreign judicial scrutiny — and the U.K. Supreme Court's upcoming decision in the matter will likely bring clarity on exceptions to the immunity doctrine, say Andrew Stafford QC and Oleg Shaulko at Kobre & Kim.
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Opinion
Justice Gap Demands Look At New Legal Service Models
Current restrictions on how lawyers structure their businesses stand in the way of meaningful access to justice for many Americans, so states should follow the lead of Utah and Florida and test out innovative law firm business models through regulatory sandboxes, says Zachariah DeMeola at the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System.
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Opinion
New NJ Fed. Rule On Litigation Funding Should Be Welcomed
The District of New Jersey's new local civil rule on litigation funding disclosure has faced exaggerated criticisms when it is a logical extension of the current practices in many U.S. jurisdictions, leads to greater transparency for the parties and the court without unduly burdening the parties, and is a positive development particularly in product liability cases, say attorneys at Dechert.
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Lessons In Civility From The Alex Oh Sanctions Controversy
Alex Oh’s abrupt departure from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and admonishment by a D.C. federal judge over conduct in an Exxon human rights case demonstrate three major costs of incivility to lawyers, and highlight the importance of teaching civility in law school, says David Grenardo at St. Mary's University.