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    You are at:Home»Crime & Justice»UK will not be haven for dirty money, Lammy to say in corruption crackdown | David Lammy
    Crime & Justice

    UK will not be haven for dirty money, Lammy to say in corruption crackdown | David Lammy

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtDecember 7, 2025004 Mins Read
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    UK will not be haven for dirty money, Lammy to say in corruption crackdown | David Lammy
    ‘We must root out the minority who help corrupt actors hide their dirty money,’ David Lammy will say. Photograph: Thomas Krych/Zuma Press/Shutterstock
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    The UK will no longer be a haven for dirty money and dictators’ laundered assets, David Lammy is to promise as he announces a new anti-corruption strategy also aimed at tackling bribery and other misconduct across government and public services.

    Setting out the plan in a speech in London on Monday, Lammy, the justice secretary and deputy prime minister, will announce a series of initiatives including extra funding for an elite anti-corruption police unit.

    While some elements of the strategy are still to be finalised, a global summit on countering illicit finance to be hosted by the UK, possibly next year, will focus on underhanded use of cryptocurrencies, gold and property, the Guardian understands.

    As part of the plan being launched by Lammy, the domestic corruption unit at the City of London police, which focuses on bribery and other misconduct in UK financial services and public bodies, will be expanded and given £15m in new funding.

    Other promised measures include more action to tackle “professional enablers” who help foreign autocrats and others shift and conceal illicit wealth, including more coordination by the National Crime Agency and the possibility of new sanctions.

    Margaret Hodge, a former Labour MP who is a noted anti-corruption campaigner, will lead an official review of stolen or illegitimate assets in the UK so as to find ways to shut down vulnerabilities exploited by criminals.

    The aim is that this will expand the scope of existing registers from companies into more opaque ownership structures such as trusts.

    Some sections of the strategy take in initiatives already announced or in progress, for example giving the Financial Conduct Authority new powers to oversee all professional services firms such as accountants, as part of an overhaul to tackle money laundering and terrorist financing.

    Lammy will also pledge moves to improve transparency in political donations and in the awarding of contracts by councils.

    “The National Crime Agency says that over £100bn could be laundered through or within the UK every single year, helped by an army of enablers’, Lammy will say, according to extracts of the speech released in advance. “And while most British professionals – our lawyers, our accountants – are honest, we must root out the minority who help corrupt actors hide their dirty money and polish their dirty reputations.”

    In his former role as foreign secretary, Lammy will say, he witnessed at first hand “kleptocrats bleeding their countries dry, stealing from their own people, bankrolling authoritarianism [and] fuelling conflict”, including Russia’s aggression towards Ukraine.

    He will say networks of dirty money “spread across borders like a stain” using shell companies, property and crypto assets. “And too often the trail leads back here to London, to a financial system admired across the world, precisely because it is trusted,” he will add. “That trust and our security are now under attack, exploited by those Kremlin-linked elites who enable Putin’s aggression.

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    “We must be clear: this city, this country, will no longer be their haven. We will stop them.”

    Lammy will use the complexity of such money laundering as a way to additionally justify separate plans to scrap jury trials in some cases, arguing that specialist judges are far better suited to dealing with such complex evidence.

    “Judge-only trials in the most complex frauds will get justice moving faster and send a clear message: if you loot, if you launder, if you defraud the British people, you will be caught, and tried by those who understand your tricks, and you will face the consequences,” he will say.

    Part of the wider crackdown will be focused on misdeeds not just in professions such as accountancy and law but also in public services, Lammy will say.

    “The vast majority of our police, prison and border officers do extraordinary work but the minority who succumb to bribes, let more drugs and weapons on to our streets, leave more criminals on the loose, eat away at the public trust frontline services depend on.”

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