Ethics Institute launches taskforce to examine legal services to oligarchs and kleptocrats

By Law News
The 12-strong Taskforce on Business Ethics and the Legal Profession, chaired by Guy Beringer KC (Hon) (former Senior Partner of Allen & Overy)
The Institute of Business Ethics is to launch a new Taskforce to examine the provision of civil legal services to overseas oligarchs and kleptocrats by UK-based firms.
- New Taskforce to examine the provision of legal services by UK-based firms to overseas oligarchs and kleptocrats.
- Group to bring together legal experts, academics and civil society representatives for legal sector-wide consultation.
- Taskforce to be charged with delivering recommendations to reconcile reputational and ethical risks of providing services with rights to representation.
The task force will be charged with examining the reputational and ethical risks to the legal profession of taking on such clients, and how these can be reconciled with rights to representation, longstanding professional values, and international obligations such as those set out in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
The members of the Taskforce are:
- Guy Beringer KC (Hon) – Chair
- Robert Barrington, Professor of Anti-Corruption Practice, Centre for the Study of Corruption – Deputy Chair
- Michael Bennett, Former Partner and GC, Linklaters
- Sara Carnegie, Legal Director, International Bar Association
- Sarah de Gay, Master of the City of London Solicitors’ Company, President of the City of London Law Society (2023/24), Non-Executive Director, Independent Committee Member, and Solicitor
- Jonathan Goldsmith, Consultant in European and International Legal Services
- Duncan Hames, Director of Policy and Programmes, Transparency International UK
- Susan Hawley, Executive Director, Spotlight on Corruption
- Stephen Mayson, Centre for Ethics and Law, University College London
- Julie Norris, Partner, Regulatory Team, Kingsley Napley LLP
- Patricia Robertson KC, Fountain Court Chambers
- Jeff Twentyman, Chair of Sustainability and Responsible Business, Slaughter and May
The formation of the Taskforce follows the high-profile exit of many firms from Russian business following the invasion of Ukraine, and long-standing concerns by the UK, EU and US governments that lawyers may be playing a role in enabling overseas corruption. Civil society representatives have warned that UK legal services are too accessible to corrupt capital, while members of the legal profession have warned of the risks of undermining core principles such as the right to representation, access to justice, and the principle of not associating the lawyer with the client.
The Taskforce is expected to share its recommendations with law firms, regulators, law makers and other stakeholders within 12 months.
Dr Ian Peters MBE, Director of the Institute of Business Ethics, said:

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