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08 August 2025 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 8128 / Categories: Features , International , Transport
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All aboard!

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Are your bags packed? Globetrotting guru Dominic Regan signs off for the summer with an au revoir, plus some top travel tips

Foreign travel is a joy, provided you have a valid passport with you. The Passport Office is by a mile the most efficient government department I have ever dealt with, a view endorsed by my children. Make sure you pack yours, unlike the pilot of United Airlines Flight UA 198 who recently had to turn back on a run from Los Angeles to Shanghai after realising over the Pacific that he had left it behind.

Money money money

I hold the usual bank cards. For spending abroad, I have debit cards from both Monzo and Chase. Both give you a near-perfect exchange rate. In Italy last month, I was getting €1.20 to the pound when the best exchange rate for notes I could get at home was €1.15. Unlike most banks and card providers, no 3% foreign transaction fee is levied.

Both of my providers say they do not charge

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Carey Olsen—Patrick Ormond

Carey Olsen—Patrick Ormond

Partner joinscorporate and finance practice in British Virgin Islands

Dawson Cornwell—Naomi Angell

Dawson Cornwell—Naomi Angell

Firm strengthens children department with adoption and surrogacy expert

Penningtons Manches Cooper—Graham Green

Penningtons Manches Cooper—Graham Green

Media and technology expert joins employment team as partner in Cambridge

NEWS
Freezing orders in divorce proceedings can unexpectedly ensnare third parties and disrupt businesses. In NLJ this week, Lucy James of Trowers & Hamlins explains how these orders—dubbed a ‘nuclear weapon’—preserve assets but can extend far beyond spouses to companies and business partners 
A Court of Appeal ruling has clarified that ‘rent’ must be monetary—excluding tenants paid in labour from statutory protection. In this week's NLJ, James Naylor explains Garraway v Phillips, where a tenant worked two days a week instead of paying rent
Thousands more magistrates are to be recruited, under a major shake-up to speed up and expand the hiring process
Three men wrongly imprisoned for a combined 77 years have been released—yet received ‘not a penny’ in compensation, exposing deep flaws in the justice system. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Jon Robins reports on Justin Plummer, Oliver Campbell and Peter Sullivan, whose convictions collapsed amid discredited forensics, ‘oppressive’ police interviews and unreliable ‘cell confessions’
A quiet month for employment cases still delivers key legal clarifications. In his latest Employment Law Brief for NLJ, Ian Smith reports that whistleblowing protection remains intact even where disclosures are partly self-serving, provided the worker reasonably believes they serve the ‘public interest’ 
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