Paws of Justice: Bound by Loopholes

SRA Faces £189,000 Costs Bill After Ignoring Own AML Guidance: Implications for UK Legal Sector

SRA enforcement · AML compliance · Regulatory accountability

The SRA’s failed first-instance case against Dentons, and the reported £189,000 costs order that followed, raised a serious public-interest question: how should a legal regulator apply its own guidance when bringing complex anti-money laundering enforcement action?

Category
Regulatory accountability
Jurisdiction
England & Wales
Reading time
c. 7 minutes
Last reviewed
1 June 2026
By-line
Legal Lens

Publication snapshot

  • This article considers the SRA’s AML enforcement case against Dentons and the reported first-instance costs order.
  • It focuses on regulatory consistency, use of guidance, proportionality and public confidence.
  • It treats the case as a regulatory accountability issue, not as a finding that the SRA acted improperly or that Dentons had no AML issues requiring scrutiny.
Reader note: this article is public-interest commentary based on reported proceedings and materials available at the time of writing. References to regulatory error, enforcement concern, proportionality or public-confidence risk are analysis and criticism, not findings of misconduct by the SRA, Dentons, or any individual.

The core issue: regulators must be disciplined too

Anti-money laundering compliance is a serious public-interest issue. Solicitors and law firms play an important role in preventing the legal sector from being misused for financial crime, and regulators are entitled to take enforcement action where firms fall short.

But enforcement must itself be disciplined. A regulator that expects firms to follow guidance, assess risk and document decisions must apply the same discipline to its own prosecutorial choices. Where a tribunal criticises the regulator’s approach, the issue is not merely technical. It goes to public confidence in regulatory fairness.

The key distinction

Robust AML enforcement is necessary. Inconsistent or poorly framed enforcement is a different problem. Public protection requires both regulatory strength and regulatory precision.

The SRA’s role in legal regulation

The Solicitors Regulation Authority regulates solicitors and authorised firms in England and Wales. Its role includes setting standards, supervising compliance and taking enforcement action where regulated persons or firms fail to meet professional obligations.

The public-interest burden on the SRA is substantial. It must protect clients and the public, maintain trust in legal services, and respond to misconduct or compliance failure. At the same time, it must act fairly, proportionately and consistently, particularly where it brings serious allegations before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal.

That balance matters in AML cases. Money laundering risk is real, but allegations of AML failure can be reputationally serious, resource-intensive and highly technical. If the regulator’s case is not aligned with the guidance applicable at the time, the enforcement process itself becomes open to challenge.

The Dentons case: first-instance outcome

The SRA brought allegations against Dentons concerning anti-money laundering compliance during the period between 2013 and 2017. The case was heard by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal in 2024.

According to the Law Society Gazette report relied on in the source article, the tribunal dismissed the allegations at first instance after a six-day hearing. The reported outcome included findings that any breaches were inadvertent, and that the firm had relevant AML systems and controls in place.

The case attracted attention because Dentons is a major international firm and because the tribunal’s reported reasoning raised questions about how the regulator had applied guidance, practice notes and historic assessments of the firm’s AML controls.

Why the case attracted attention

  • High-profile respondent: Dentons is one of the world’s largest law firms.
  • Serious subject matter: the case concerned AML compliance, a key regulatory risk area.
  • Historic conduct period: the allegations concerned events several years before the hearing.
  • Guidance issue: the tribunal was reported to have criticised how the SRA approached its own guidance and relevant practice notes.

The reported £189,000 costs order

The most striking feature of the first-instance outcome was the reported costs order. The SRA’s application for Dentons to contribute to its costs was rejected, and the regulator was instead reported to have been ordered to pay Dentons’ costs of £189,000.

Costs orders of that kind matter because they send a signal. They do not merely allocate money between parties. They may also indicate concern about how the case was brought, pursued or framed. In regulatory litigation, that can have wider implications for confidence in enforcement decision-making.

The reported ruling suggested that the SRA had not properly accounted for guidance and practice material relevant to the period in question. If accurate, that is a serious procedural lesson for any regulator: enforcement should be assessed against the rules, guidance and regulatory expectations that were actually applicable at the relevant time.

  1. 1
    Regulator identifies risk.

    The SRA identifies possible AML compliance failures within a regulated firm.

  2. 2
    Case is brought.

    The allegations are advanced before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal.

  3. 3
    Guidance becomes central.

    The tribunal considers how the conduct should be assessed against relevant standards and guidance.

  4. 4
    Public confidence is tested.

    If the regulator is criticised, the issue becomes not only the firm’s compliance but the regulator’s own discipline.

Current position: why the procedural history matters

The 2024 tribunal outcome should not be treated as the end of the matter. Subsequent reporting records that the SRA later succeeded in a High Court appeal, with the earlier tribunal ruling quashed and the case remitted to a new SDT panel for reconsideration.

That later development matters. It means the case should not be presented as a simple story of the SRA losing permanently and Dentons being vindicated finally. The safer and more accurate point is narrower: the first-instance outcome and costs order raised legitimate questions about enforcement framing, regulatory guidance and proportionality, even though the procedural position later changed.

The publication-safe point

This is not a final merits article about Dentons’ AML compliance. It is an accountability article about how regulators should frame, evidence and pursue serious enforcement cases.

Why the case matters for the legal sector

The Dentons case sits within a wider debate about the SRA’s regulatory performance. The legal sector needs an effective AML regulator. It also needs a regulator whose enforcement action is seen as principled, consistent and properly grounded.

If enforcement is too weak, public protection suffers. If enforcement is overreaching or poorly reasoned, confidence in regulatory fairness suffers. The public interest lies in neither extreme. It lies in firm, evidence-led, proportionate regulation.

What effective AML enforcement requires

  • Clear standards that firms can understand and apply.
  • Evidence-based assessment of actual risk and actual systems.
  • Fair use of guidance applicable at the relevant time.
  • Consistent treatment across firms and factual scenarios.
  • Transparent reasoning when serious enforcement is pursued.

What poor enforcement can damage

  • Public trust in the regulator.
  • Confidence among firms trying to comply.
  • Credibility of future AML action.
  • Regulatory resources and public value for money.
  • The distinction between genuine misconduct and historic compliance disagreement.

The issue is not whether large firms should be immune from enforcement. They plainly should not. The issue is whether the regulator’s case is strong enough, fair enough and disciplined enough to withstand proper scrutiny.

Regulatory lessons from the Dentons litigation

The lesson from this litigation is not that the SRA should step back from AML work. It is that the SRA must be able to show the same rigour it demands from the profession. That includes careful use of guidance, proportionate charging decisions, clear evidential analysis and transparent learning when cases do not proceed as expected.

Practical accountability questions

  • Guidance: did the regulator apply the correct guidance for the relevant period?
  • Evidence: did the case distinguish between inadvertent weakness, systemic failure and serious misconduct?
  • Proportionality: was prosecution the right route, or could supervision, warning or other intervention have been more appropriate?
  • Consistency: are similar AML cases being handled in comparable ways?
  • Learning: where costs are awarded against the regulator, what internal review follows?

For the legal profession, the case is also a reminder that AML compliance must be documented and defensible. Policies are not enough. Firms need to show that systems are understood, applied, reviewed and evidenced across the relevant files and client matters.

For the public, the case raises a broader point. Legal regulation is not only about punishing misconduct. It is about maintaining a system in which the public can trust that lawyers are properly supervised and that regulators themselves act with fairness, discipline and accountability.

The closing point

The Dentons AML litigation should not be reduced to a headline about a costs order. Its real importance is the accountability lesson: a regulator that enforces standards must be able to show that its own enforcement decisions are consistent, evidence-led and aligned with its guidance.

Legal Lens supports litigants in person, whistleblowers, consumers, campaigners and public-interest accountability work.

This article is public-interest commentary and general information. It is not legal advice. It does not make findings of misconduct by the SRA, Dentons, or any individual. AML regulation, disciplinary proceedings and costs decisions are fact-sensitive and should be checked against the underlying tribunal and court materials.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Skip to toolbar