All articles by Catherine Baksi – Page 29

  • News

    Threat to jobs at DWF

    2013-05-27T00:00:00Z

    Job losses are expected at national firm DWF after it announced it is reviewing over 80 posts

  • News

    Residence test proposal ‘unlawful and unworkable’

    2013-05-27T00:00:00Z

    Lawyers have warned that the proposed introduction of a residence test for civil legal aid is potentially ‘unlawful, discriminatory and unworkable’ 

  • News

    Unanimous: profession votes for ‘training days’ action in protest over cuts

    2013-05-20T00:00:00Z

    In an unprecedented show of unity by the legal profession hundreds of barristers and solicitors came together yesterday to oppose the government’s proposed criminal legal aid cuts which they said would ‘destroy the fabric of the criminal justice system’. Over 1,000 attended a London meeting dubbed ...

  • News

    Overwhelming public backing for legal aid: poll

    2013-05-20T00:00:00Z

    Government claims that the legal aid system has lost credibility with the public are rebutted by a survey published today showing that seven out of 10 adults fear that criminal legal aid cuts could lead to innocent people being convicted of crimes they did not commit.

  • News

    Hundreds attend legal aid protest rally

    2013-05-20T00:00:00Z

    Over 500 lawyers attended a mass rally at parliament today to protest over criminal legal aid reforms which ‘strike a dagger through the British justice system’. Gerry Conlon, one of the Guildford Four and Breeda Power, daughter of one of the Birmingham Six, were also ...

  • News

    Appeal Court applies Russian law in dispute

    20 May 2013

    The Court of Appeal has applied Russian law to dismiss an appeal by a wealthy Russian businessman who sought a half-share of the family’s £40m London home. The dispute concerned the beneficial ownership of a family home bought by Vladimir and Olga Slutsker using an offshore ...

  • News

    Grayling asks for quality standard for PCT firms

    20 May 2013

    The justice secretary has asked the Law Society and Bar Council to develop a quality standard for firms bidding for criminal legal aid contracts under controversial plans for price-competitive tendering (PCT). In an exclusive interview with the Gazette, Chris Grayling said: ‘I have invited both the ...

  • News

    Mass meeting of barristers takes a stand on QASA

    20 May 2013

    The largest of the six bar circuits has voted to boycott the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) – which the circuit leader vowed ‘will be defeated’. At a ‘unique’ meeting attended by some 400 barristers in London on Saturday, Sarah Forshaw QC, leader of the ...

  • ChrisGrayling1
    Profile

    Chris Grayling

    20 May 2013

    Speaking to the Gazette, Chris Grayling offers no empirical evidence that the public has lost confidence in the system.

  • News

    Court interpreters reject new contract deal

    20 May 2013

    Courts are being disrupted on a ‘daily basis’ as interpreters continue to boycott the private sector contract for translation services, despite a peace move by the Ministry of Justice, an interpreters group claimed this week. The ministry last month revealed that it would foot ...

  • News

    PCT will mean the death of Welsh justice, lawyers warn

    2013-05-20T00:00:00Z

    The government’s plans for price-competitive tendering (PCT) will have a ‘devastating’ impact on firms and chambers in Wales, leaving clients represented by English firms and without Welsh language provision, lawyers have warned. Their concerns come as solicitors and barristers unite today staging a demonstration in Westminster ...

  • News

    30 to meet Grayling in legal aid crisis talks

    13 May 2013

    The Law Society has published the list of the 30 criminal lawyers who will represent the profession at the first of two head-to-head meetings with the justice secretary in crunch talks over the government’s planned criminal legal aid reforms. The first meeting will take place at ...

  • News

    Criminal legal aid cuts to reach £370m

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    The Ministry of Justice has confirmed that projected savings of £150m in fee cuts will not, as was expected, count towards required cuts of £220m a year - taking cuts in criminal legal aid to £370m. An official also revealed that the MoJ has no contingency ...

  • News

    Society and bar join hands against criminal justice plans

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    The legal profession has united in its opposition to the government’s proposals for fee cuts and reforms which lawyers say will ‘sabotage’ the criminal justice system. The Law Society and Bar Council today issued a statement on the four key planks of changes set out in ...

  • News

    Bar Council picks a former mandarin

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    The Bar Council has appointed former education civil servant Stephen Crowne as its chief executive to fill a post that has been vacant for two years. Crowne (pictured), 55, joins the Bar Council from IT company Cisco, where he was responsible for developing a ...

  • News

    Jurors ‘confused’ on new media contempt

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    Groundbreaking research on juries has revealed that most jurors feel they are not given enough guidance on conducting deliberations, while almost a quarter misunderstand the rules on internet use during trials. Among jurors who misunderstand the contempt rules, 16% believe they cannot use the internet at ...

  • News

    Traffic courts to be set up

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    Dedicated traffic courts will be established to deal with low-level road traffic offences and free up the courts to deal with more ‘serious and contested’ cases, the government announced today. The new courts follow a pilot in nine areas. The Ministry of Justice said it is ...

  • News

    MoJ plans crackdown on ‘so-called’ experts

    2013-05-13T00:00:00Z

    Experts whose evidence is ‘not up to scratch’ will be driven out of the family courts by reforms announced today by the Ministry of Justice. It has opened a nine-week consultation on new national standards designed to raise the quality of experts in family courts ...

  • News

    ‘Going to court was worse than the abuse’

    06 May 2013

    ‘You can’t be certain that you think that it wasn’t possible that you filled in the first side of the form?’ If you struggled for a moment with that question, imagine how it must have felt for a defendant with learning difficulties who was asked it ...

  • News

    Bar: legal aid plans will ‘irreversibly undermine access’

    06 May 2013

    The Bar Council has called on the Ministry of Justice to reconsider its ‘discriminatory’ legal aid cuts that it warns will ‘irreversibly undermine access to justice’ and create a two-tier service. It is urging all barristers to write to their MPs alerting them to the dangers ...