Allen & Overy (London)

Susanna Charlwood

Allen & Overy (London)
Partner

Susanna Charlwood is a partner in Allen and Overy London office. She was previously a partner in Shearman & Sterling’s Litigation Group in London. She has broad experience in the litigation and arbitration of commercial disputes with a particular focus on banking and finance related matters, including restructuring and insolvency situations. Susanna Charlwood has represented a number of leading corporates and financial institutions in high profile and high value disputes frequently involving concurrent proceedings in more than one jurisdiction. She also acts for financial institutions and corporates involved in domestic and international regulatory investigations and enforcements, both civil and criminal.

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Allen & Overy (Hamburg)
Allen & Overy (Brussels)
Allen & Overy (Paris)
Allen & Overy (Hamburg)
Allen & Overy (Palo Alto)

Articles

673 Bulletin

Elvira Aliende Rodriguez, James Webber, Ozlem Fidanboylu, Susanna Charlwood, Jonathan Swil The UK Supreme Court hands down a judgment in a competition damages lawsuit and makes key observations on when a judicial decision of the EU courts is binding in other proceedings (Secretary of State for Health / Servier Laboratories)

371

Holds Findings Made by European Courts Cannot Be Relied on in Different Context in Other Proceedings On November 6, 2020 the U.K. Supreme Court handed down a judgment relating to the Servier U.K. competition damages litigation, in which it made key observations on when a judicial decision of (...)

Jo Rickard, Simon Cohen, Susanna Charlwood The English High Court rules that notes of witness interviews prepared by in-house and external counsel in the course of an internal investigation were not covered by legal advice privilege or lawyers’ working papers privilege (RBS Rights Issue Litigation)

302

In December 2016, the English High Court ruled that transcripts, notes and other records of witness interviews prepared by in-house and external counsel in the course of an internal investigation were not covered by either legal advice privilege (“LAP”) or lawyers’ working papers privilege. The (...)

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