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17 April 2026
Issue: 8157 / Categories: Case law , In Court , Law digest
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Law digests: 17 April 2026

Data protection

Baldwin v The Information Commissioner [2026] UKFTT 497 (GRC)

The First-tier Tribunal struck out the applicant’s application under rule 8(2)(a) because the tribunal does not have jurisdiction to deal with it, and under rule 8(3)(c) because there is no reasonable prospect of it succeeding. The applicant sought an order under s 166(2) of the Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA 2018) requiring the Information Commissioner (IC) to ‘take appropriate steps to respond to complaint’ regarding the Home Office’s handling of his personal data shared with external legal counsel. The tribunal held that the IC had provided outcomes to the applicant’s complaint on four occasions, thereby complying with the procedural requirements of s 165(4) and s 166(1), DPA 2018. The tribunal found that s 166 is limited to narrow procedural issues concerning the IC’s handling of complaints and does not permit challenges to the substantive outcome or merits of a complaint. The applicant’s dissatisfaction with the IC’s conclusion that the Home Office appropriately shared his data with external counsel under the ‘Public

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Charles Russell Speechlys—James Paterson

Charles Russell Speechlys—James Paterson

Charles Russell Speechlys further bolsters Private Equity expertise with the appointment of James Paterson

Ellisons—Samuel Flower

Ellisons—Samuel Flower

Ellisons strengthens Rural Affairs team with senior appointment

Sidley—Carl Hotton

Sidley—Carl Hotton

Sidley adds insurance mergers and acquisitions partner to London office

NEWS
A deputy costs judge correctly exercised his discretion to allow late service rather than strike out the point of dispute, the Court of Appeal has held
Prince Harry, Baroness Doreen Lawrence and five others have lost their case against the publisher of the Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and MailOnline, in Various Claimants v Associated Newspapers [2026] EWHC 1637 (KB)
Public confidence in the justice system is being undermined by a lack of accessible, useable data, magistrates have warned
The Sentencing Council has launched draft guidelines for facilitation and endangering another person during a sea crossing to the UK
Government proposals to make independent written legal advice a prerequisite for workplace non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) may prove unworkable, according to a senior employment lawyer
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