News | June 16, 2026
New offering bridges the gap between technology expectations and real-world performance, helping clients manage disputes, remediation efforts, and emerging technologies.
May 11, 2018
We are pleased to announce that Nick M. Child and Natasha Willicombe have joined Secretariat. Based in London, they will lead our Business Development function across the globe and drive our growth in Europe and beyond.
Mr. Child is a seasoned professional and has played a particularly active role in the global construction law industry for over 26 years. He heads up firm-wide business development and will focus on delivering the Secretariat brand around the world. With his detailed knowledge and understanding of the market and our specialist practice areas, Mr. Child puts the needs and expectations of our clients first.
Ms. Willicombe is a Business and Law graduate with more than 20 years’ experience in the legal sector. She will play an essential role in business development for Secretariat by putting her detailed knowledge and understanding of our specialist practice areas into play.
To view full bios, please click on the links below:
https://dev-secretariat-intl-old.pantheonsite.io/member/nick-child/
https://dev-secretariat-intl-old.pantheonsite.io/member/natasha-willicombe/
New offering bridges the gap between technology expectations and real-world performance, helping clients manage disputes, remediation efforts, and emerging technologies.
What Companies Should Be Watching in Securities Enforcement for the Remainder of 2026
Companies face a shifting securities enforcement landscape in H2 2026, where AI, digital assets, prediction markets, and parallel investigations create new risks even as financial reporting and controls remain core priorities driving more targeted, tech-focused, and multi-agency scrutiny.
Algorithmic Pricing, Antitrust Risk, and the Role of Economic Analysis
Recent DOJ settlements and new California and New York legislation are clarifying antitrust risks around algorithmic pricing. This article examines key enforcement themes, high-risk forms of data sharing and information exchange, and the role of economic analysis in assessing algorithm design, adoption, competitive effects, and compliance risk.