SRA 4 Hour Webinar Bundle [2026]
Webinar Details
Available now
Expires after 90 days
Trevor Hellawell MA (Cantab)
CPD Hours: 4
£120.00
Enquiries
Our 4-hour SRA Webinar Bundle consists of 4 x 1-hour pre-recorded webinars.
This bundle includes the titles below:
- AML Update 2026
- Accounts Rules Update 2026
- Sanctions - what do we need to check?
- Regulatory Punishments for ethical breaches
More details about the courses:
1. AML Update 2026
This session will include a roundup of all the latest developments in the world of AML, including reflections on who will govern us, details in the new LSAG Guidance, fresh lists of high-risk third countries, new approaches to source of wealth and funds enquiries, new draft Regulations in the pipeline and a reflection on how to complete our client and matter risk assessments.
2. Accounts Rules Update 2026
This session will include a roundup of the latest developments in the world of Accounts Rules compliance, including reflections on recent consultations about whether lawyers can be trusted with client money at all after Axiom Ince, whether the Rules on Accountants’ reports need tightening and whether we should sacrifice 75% of the interest we earn (over and above what we pay out to clients) to ‘finance the justice system’.
3. Sanctions - what do we need to check?
This session will include a discussion of the sanctions regime and how it might affect any practice in the land. It will include a review of the latest position on the UK sanctions lists (as amended on 28 January 2026), the most recent SRA Guidance on the subject and how we can go about checking on our clients and others in the supply chain to ascertain their designation status.
4. Regulatory Punishments for ethical breaches
This session will include a roundup of the latest developments in the world of regulatory enforcement by the SRA. It will include reflections on what to do if we are faced with a regulatory settlement agreement (RSA) and what might the implications be if we ‘plead guilty’ in order to make it go away. What is to be made of the Axiom Ince, SSB, Post Office and other scandals and effects they have had on the public perception of trust in the profession and whether the current regime of regulation is adequate?