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United Kingdom

Starmer-era UK financial crime policy: resourcing constraints, revenue-focused enforcement, kleptocracy, sanctions, tax gap, COVID-19 fraud, SFO independence, whistleblowers and ECCTA

Published on: 12 July 2024

Published by a Law360 reporter
Legal News
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Article summary

Sir Keir Starmer, the newly elected Prime Minister, previously worked as a leading criminal defence barrister and as Director of Public Prosecutions. Accordingly, we can anticipate an administration led by a premier with clear, robust views on policy and law-making around financial crime, and on the criminal justice system more generally. Starmer’s principal choices for the relevant ministerial and law officer positions are, however, not drawn from classic white-collar backgrounds: Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood is expected to face a bulging in-tray, tackling prison overcrowding and a faltering courts system. The new Attorney General, Richard Hermer KC, is a heavyweight practitioner in human rights as well as public and private international law. Only Home Secretary Yvette Cooper continues from the opposition team that produced ‘Labour's Policy Review: Tackling Serious Fraud and White Collar Crime’ in 2022. A look at the 2024 Labour Party Manifesto is light on detail regarding the government’s direction of travel on financial crime. Labour recognises the scale of fraud, making up 40% of all crimes in the UK, and promises a ‘new expanded fraud strategy’ that will encompass serious fraud, but offers no additional clarity. Foreign Secretary David Lammy has recently pledged that the government ultimately will...

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