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The phrase "and later when" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to indicate a sequence of events, particularly when referring to a time that follows a previously mentioned event.
Example: "I finished my homework, and later when I had some free time, I went for a walk."
Alternatives: "and subsequently when" or "and afterward when".
Exact(60)
The search was on, and later when they brought it up went through it carefully.
Shelley: Monday to Thursday no TV, only the Cosby show, and later, when Urkel came along.
Tells about the conversation when Mr. Mostel arrived and later when the guests came, and a bit about the paintings.
What's extinct will be extinct — and later, when we're finally ready to stop messing around, it will be too late.
Then, and later, when an adult mentioned the Scouts with a snobbish snigger, I would think: you have no idea.
William Schlemmer went to work for him, and later when he wanted his uncle to expand the store, persuaded Alfred Hammacher to put $5,000 into Tollner's business.
In watching the boy's reactions as they landed their bluefish, and later when they cleaned and then ate them, I saw that approach at work.
You see what she sees and loves, and later, when she rebels against the queen, you understand what's at stake for her: pleasure, independence, transcendence.
That was the first six tricks in, and later, when East led a spade, South took the winning finesse to finish with eight winners.
Mr. Jacobs alluded to it in a brilliant show a couple of years back for his own label, and later when he cast Victoria Beckham for his advertisements.
That rationality — and her sense of herself as "a creature of rules" — would prove useful in law school, and later when she was a prosecutor and judge.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com