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The VC legal arsenal to combat entrepreneurial fraud
Driven by the recent eFishery scandal and shifting market conditions, early-stage investors are changing their approach to due diligence and risk tolerance.
Global | Publication | October 2014
The latest version of the LCIA Arbitration Rules comes into force in October 2014. Included in its revisions will be guidelines that counsel participating in international arbitrations must comply with, making the LCIA one of the first institutions of its kind to promote the good and equal conduct of parties’ representatives.
The guidelines on the conduct of party representatives have the purpose of defining and promoting good and equal conduct, and operate to level the playing field for advocates, who frequently come from diverse legal traditions.
Parties will be required to ensure that their legal representatives have agreed to comply with the guidelines, which include prohibitions on unfairly obstructing the arbitration, jeopardising the finality of any award, and knowingly relying on false evidence.
If a party representative is alleged to have breached his or her responsibilities under the guidelines, the tribunal may decide if a violation has occurred and, if so, what sanctions to order. The tribunal has the power to order a written reprimand or caution, as well as ‘any other measure necessary to fulfil within the arbitration the general duties required of the tribunal’. In practice, tribunals may take the conduct of party representatives into account in allocating arbitration costs.
The 2014 Rules will also see a number of important procedural and technological revisions designed to reduce the timescale and cost of arbitrations.
These include
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Driven by the recent eFishery scandal and shifting market conditions, early-stage investors are changing their approach to due diligence and risk tolerance.
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