• Sectors we work in banner(2)

    Quick Reads

Unexplained Wealth Orders: Playing the Trump card

Slowly but surely the Unexplained Wealth Order (UWO) as a civil power and investigatory tool appears to be gaining interest and prominence, with a spotlight currently being shone by its potential association with the soon-to-be former president of the United States, Donald Trump.

By way of recap, UWOs can be made against individuals and in relation to their property where there is reasonable cause to believe that (a) the person has assets worth more than £50,000; (b) the person’s lawful net income is not sufficient to obtain the property in question; and (c) the person is either a politically exposed person, a person involved in serious crime, or a person with connections to someone who is or has been involved in serious crime. These are the questions with which the Court would be faced were an application for a UWO to be made against Mr Trump in respect of his various investments in Scotland, in particular his resort hotel, Trump Turnberry.

If granted, the effect of a UWO is to require the person to explain, with reference to supporting materials, the nature and extent of their interest in the property in question and how the property was obtained – effectively compelling the respondent to disclose confidential recordings in respect of personal financial matters, an insight never previously available to our law enforcement agencies (the National Crime Agency, Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs, The Financial Conduct Authority, The Serious Fraud Office, and The Crown Prosecution Service).

It is to be remembered, however, that a UWO is an investigatory tool limited to a requirement to provide information; it is not a power to recover or freeze assets and it exists in addition to other powers available to law enforcement agencies pursuant to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. It is in effect a ground-breaking gateway tool which, depending on the nature of the disclosure obtained, can open up further lines of enquiry and the ultimately the potential for enforcement against assets held by the individual. That being said, it is understood that whilst UWOs have been used very effectively to gather previously inaccessible information, none have yet resulted in the recovery of any funds or of a conviction, and the agencies who have them in their armoury may well be feeling the pressure to ensure that investigations making use of this high profile tool eventually bear fruit.

Whether or not the Scottish Government choose to act upon the Scottish Greens’ campaign in relation to Mr Trump’s Scottish investments remains to be seen, but there is certainly no doubt that to do so would elevate the UWO to a global stage where the stakes of eventual success would be ever higher.

The Scottish Greens have launched a campaign to put pressure on the Scottish Government to seek an unexplained wealth order (UWO) on Trump International’s acquisition of Turnberry.

Our thinking

  • Arbitrating shareholders’ disputes

    Thomas R. Snider

    Insights

  • Joseph Evans, Cassidy Fan and Jessica Boxford write for New Law Journal on the future of insolvency: a digital asset revolution

    Joseph Evans

    In the Press

  • Law 360 quotes Stewart Hey on the potential integration of the PSR into the FCA and the impact on APP fraud reimbursement

    Stewart Hey

    In the Press

  • Singaporean Court Declines to Revisit SIAC Registrar’s Administrative Decision

    Thomas R. Snider

    Insights

  • New "In-House Counsel Privilege" in Swiss law

    Pierre Bydzovsky

    Insights

  • Swiss Anti-Corruption Laws: A Guide to Bribery Offences, Compliance, and Penalties

    Daniela Iselin

    Insights

  • Passage of the English Arbitration Act 2025 into Law

    Thomas R. Snider

    Insights

  • Mary Bagnall writes for FMCG CEO on the recent Thatchers v Aldi court ruling

    Mary Bagnall

    In the Press

  • RTHK interviews Patrick Chan on the rise of sports arbitration in Hong Kong

    Patrick Chan

    In the Press

  • Stephen Burns and Katie Bewick write for Growth Business on the options available for appointing a new director after a company dispute

    Stephen Burns

    In the Press

  • 5 trends to watch in International Arbitration in 2025

    Thomas R. Snider

    Insights

  • Living Together in the 2020s: Why more Gen Z’s are Saying 'Yes' to Cohabitation Agreements

    Cara Fung

    Quick Reads

  • Stepping into the Director's Chair: The Landscape of Risk in Distressed Companies – Misfeasance Trading

    Jessica Boxford

    Insights

  • Justice for the Victims of Britain's Largest Ponzi Scheme?

    Caroline Greenwell

    Quick Reads

  • Moths, a mansion house and multi-million pound misrepresentations

    Katy Ackroyd

    Insights

  • The Law Society Gazette quotes Tamasin Perkins on the concerns surrounding the proposed amendment to the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill

    Tamasin Perkins

    In the Press

  • Property Patter: Challenges for commercial property in 2025

    Emma Humphreys

    Podcasts

  • An introduction to the new Procurement Act 2023

    Jamie Cartwright

    Quick Reads

  • Mind the Gap Trade Mark

    Charlotte Duly

    Insights

  • A Closer Look at the Meaning of ‘Investor’ in Investment Treaty Arbitration

    Stephen Chan

    Insights

Back to top