All articles by Catherine Baksi – Page 27

  • News

    Sentencing guidelines will prioritise victims

    Archive

    Proposed new sentencing guidelines for financial crimes published today encompass bribery and money laundering for the first time, while setting out to prioritise the impact on the victim. The guidelines, which will replace existing guidance published by the Sentencing Guidelines Council in 2009, also cover ...

  • News

    New consultation on hate crime

    Archive

    The Law Commission has published a consultation on extending the law on hate crimes to cover sexual orientation, transgender identity and disability. The Crime and Disorder Act 1998 allows for aggravated offences, including assault and criminal damage, if race or religion have motivated or formed part ...

  • News

    LSC running costs rose as legal aid shrank, report reveals

    Archive

    The amount spent on legal aid and the number of people helped dropped over the past year - but the cost of administering the Legal Services Commission went up, according to the commission’s final annual report. The report, published yesterday, is the first in five years ...

  • News

    MPs demand an end to interpreters contract

    24 June 2013

    A parliamentary debate last week heard calls for the ‘shambolic’ court interpreters contract to be scrapped, as the service continues to miss performance targets. During a debate on the Commons Justice Committee’s damning report on the contract, shadow justice minister Andy Slaughter cited a press report about a Lithuanian interpreter ...

  • News

    More work, but conveyancers still cautious

    24 June 2013

    Conveyancers have reported a 15% rise in work over the past year – although one in five fear the weak property market still poses a threat, according to a national survey. The poll of 320 solicitors and licensed conveyancers carried out by search provider SearchFlow found that 59% reported a ...

  • News

    CPS under fire for failures in two serious cases

    24 June 2013

    The Crown Prosecution Service has been criticised by two separate Crown court judges after sending an ‘incompetent’ advocate to prosecute a murder trial and for ‘lamentable failures’ that delayed a rape trial. In the first case, judge Richard Griffith-Jones, sitting at Warwick, ordered an investigation after a murder trial had ...

  • News

    Solicitors warned following breach of confidentiality

    24 June 2013

    The Court of Appeal has censured two solicitors and a barrister after an embargoed draft judgment was disclosed to third parties in breach of a court order. At the end of a hearing where the Crown unsuccessfully appealed against a ruling to stay criminal proceedings against Telford delivery driver Noshad ...

  • News

    Bar chief calls for royal commission

    24 June 2013

    More than two decades after the Runciman Commission was set up following high-profile miscarriages of justice, the chairman of the Bar Council has called for a royal commission to conduct a root-and-branch review of the criminal justice system. Maura McGowan suggested that the system be reviewed holistically, as the government ...

  • News

    Clegg fuels rumours of cabinet split over legal aid

    24 June 2013

    Signs of a cabinet split over the government’s legal aid proposals have emerged after the deputy prime minister voiced concern over the removal of client choice and the attorney general appeared to endorse barristers’ concerns that the changes would ‘damage the justice system’. The Mail on Sunday reported yesterday that ...

  • News

    Family lawyers divided over Prest decision

    17 June 2013

    The Supreme Court’s decision to order an oil tycoon to hand over assets held by his companies to his former wife has been hailed as a victory for fairness and justice by lawyers. But family practitioners are divided on the implications of last week’s judgment in ...

  • News

    Neuberger defends judges’ right to speak out on cuts

    2013-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Lawyers and judges have a duty to help the justice system work - and could learn from eBay’s online dispute resolution procedures, according to the president of the Supreme Court. In a wide-ranging speech at the Institute for Government thinktank last night, Lord Neuberger gave a ...

  • News

    Bar complaints-handling ‘prompt, thorough and fair’ says report

    2013-06-17T00:00:00Z

    The Bar Standards Board’s handling of complaints against barristers has received a clean bill of health in an independent report published today, which praised the process as ‘prompt, thorough and fair’. The report, by independent observer Isobel Leaviss, commended the board for its fair, consistent and ...

  • News

    Grieve’s two-tier arrogance

    2013-06-17T00:00:00Z

    Lawyers advising or representing the government are paid significantly higher fee rates than legal aid lawyers representing ordinary citizens. What is the rationale for this? Both are essentially publicly funded lawyers, with their fees paid by the taxpayer.

  • News

    Legal aid cuts ‘end high-profile BME cases’

    17 June 2013

    High-profile cases such as those of murder victims Stephen Lawrence and Victoria Climbié would not have been taken up by lawyers if the government’s legal aid cuts had been in place, a prominent solicitor-advocate has warned. Imran Khan, partner at London firm Imran Khan & ...

  • News

    Legal aid champion Storer honoured

    17 June 2013

    Carol Storer, director of the Legal Aid Practitioners Group, was among the lawyers recognised in the Queen’s birthday honours list at the weekend. Storer (pictured) received an OBE for services to legal aid. She has been LAPG director for the past five years, since leaving Shelter ...

  • News

    Profits squeeze as top-50 firms open results season

    17 June 2013

    Preliminary results posted today by three top-50 firms show profits falling in 2012-13 on modest rises in turnover. At Osborne Clarke, European mergers boosted turnover by 14% to £112m, according to its provisional results posted today. However like-for-like revenue was down ...

  • News

    Exclusive: top judges compound Grayling’s PCT woes

    2013-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Senior judges led by the lord chief justice and master of the rolls have weighed in to the fevered debate about Transforming Legal Aid by issuing their own sharply worded critique of the plans. The 10-strong Judicial Executive Board’s 25-page response to the consultation, seen by ...

  • News

    Thousands take up arms over cuts

    10 June 2013

    The fight against the government’s Transforming Legal Aid reforms heated up last week as a consultation on the proposals closed with more than 13,000 responses understood to have been lodged with the Ministry of Justice. Although the ministry could not confirm the figure, this would ...

  • News

    Former solicitor convicted in £20m fraud case

    10 June 2013

    A former solicitor was among five people convicted in a £20m mortgage fraud at Mold Crown Court last week. Nicholas John Jones, 53, who at the time worked at Ravencourt Legal Services in Flint, was convicted along with two property speculators, a surveyor and a financial ...

  • News

    Juniors ‘on £14 a day’ after legal aid cuts, MPs hear

    2013-06-10T00:00:00Z

    Junior barristers will be paid as little as £14 a day – well below the minimum wage – under the government’s proposed criminal legal aid cuts, the House of Commons justice committee heard today.