Dylan Cron specialises in all aspects of corporate and commercial dispute resolution and strategy development, including administrative, regulatory and constitutional law advice and litigation, as well as dealing with public procurement and judicial review processes. He has litigated, with success, at every level of the South African judiciary and have enjoyed success in various areas of the law. This includes, without limitation, complex commercial litigation (defending the first constitutional challenge to the delinquency regime under the 2008 Companies Act; developing new law regarding statement and debatement of accounts); international arbitrations (for private equity, telecommunications and tech clients); judicial reviews (within the context of public procurement, pension, expropriation and mining matters); international trade disputes and numerous regulatory proceedings (including before the Financial Services Tribunal; IRBA; the pension funds adjudicator and WASPA).Moreover, he has been privileged to have been involved in some of the most significant public interest litigation of the last decade, including: the removal of Lt-Gen Ntlemeza as head of the Hawks; making submissions before the Constitutional Court regarding the public protector's report regarding Pres. Zuma's Nkandla compound; making submissions regarding Pres. Zuma's obligations to comply with the State Capture Commission subpoena; advancing international law arguments regarding the State's duty to arrest Sudanese President Omar Al Bashir and remain subject to the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court; challenging potential censorship policies and political partisanship at the SABC under Mr Motsoeneng's leadership; challenging charges unlawfully brought against the erstwhile Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan; and reviewing the Judicial Service Commission's appointment and disciplinary processes.
Listed skills include Legal Research, Legal Advice, Legal Opinions, Commercial Litigation, and 13 others.