Opening Doors into Law: Our Insight Day with upReach

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At Peters & Peters, we are committed to widening access to the legal profession and supporting talented students from all backgrounds. That commitment underpins our partnership with upReach, a social mobility charity that helps undergraduates from lower socio‑economic backgrounds develop the skills, confidence and connections needed to launch successful careers.   Since partnering with upReach […]

Signs of Coercive Control, Legal Significance and Why Ruby’s Law Matters

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With section 76 of the Serious Crime Act 2015, the law finally recognised that abuse can be devastating without being violent. Patterns of domination, intimidation and control, often invisible from the outside, were brought within the reach of criminal liability.   Rachel Cook has written an excellent piece for The Divorce Magazine outlining:   – […]

Contempt of court: why reform is on the horizon and why it matters

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In November 2025, the Law Commission released Part 1 of its report following a comprehensive review of the current legal framework for contempt of court. Contempt of court does not have a single definition but refers to a wide variety of conduct that is deemed to interfere with the administration of justice. However, it is […]

Peters & Peters featured in The Lawyer’s Top 10 Appeals of 2026

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We are pleased to announce that our work on the landmark Republic of Mozambique “Tuna Bonds” litigation has been recognised in The Lawyer’s Top 10 Appeals of 2026.   This high‑profile case, brought by the Attorney General of Mozambique, seeks to hold the Privinvest Group and its late owner, Iskandar Safa, accountable for their alleged […]

AI, advertising, and green claims: how the ASA is stepping up its game

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Over the last few years, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has made its stance on greenwashing clear. And now it is increasing its efforts with the use of artificial intelligence (AI). Three recent rulings highlight just how central AI has become to the regulator’s efforts to police environmental claims in online advertising.   In these […]

HR needs to lead the response to whistleblowing reforms

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The changing legislative landscape in the UK means internal channels to report wrongdoing could increasingly be bypassed.   In this article for Personnel Today, Rachel Cook and Isabella Bradstock examine numerous reforms around whistleblowing and how HR teams can prepare.   To read the article, please click here. 

Peters & Peters contributes to the latest edition of Chambers & Partners’ Anti-Corruption Global Practice Guide 2026

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We’re proud to contribute to the latest edition of Chambers & Partners’ Anti-Corruption Global Practice Guide 2026.   Our team – Neil Swift, Jasvinder Nakhwal, Charlotte Tregunna, and Rachel Cook – co-authored both the Law and Practice and Trends and Developments chapters for the UK section of the guide. We provide insight into the key changes shaping the UK’s anti-corruption landscape this year, […]

Art and antiquities: high-value assets as vehicles for money laundering

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This week, Diana Czugler presented a webinar for the School of International Financial Services titled “Art and Antiquities: High-Value Assets as Vehicles for Money Laundering”. The lecture touched on a broad stretch of areas. These included identifying why the art market is attractive for those engaged in money laundering, what exact criminal offences are involved (both predicate and in situ), […]

Serious Fraud Office’s revamped compliance guidance: what businesses need to know

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The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) closes 2025 with its third revamped guidance document for businesses. After updating its corporate co-operation guidance and the joint CPS guidance on corporate prosecutions earlier in the year, the SFO has just published a refreshed edition of its guidelines on evaluating corporate compliance programmes.   The free-standing guidance remains in […]

Peters & Peters secures deletion of an INTERPOL Diffusion

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INTERPOL has deleted a Diffusion concerning our client, a dual Russian‑Cypriot national, finding that criminal allegations of misappropriating RUB 438 million and laundering RUB 178 million concerned a commercial dispute rather than a criminal matter.   Deletion Decision   Our client, a dual Russian‑Cypriot national, was accused of misappropriating RUB 438 million of funds from […]