Headlines – Page 1076

  • News

    Eight-week PCT consultation period looks like a fig leaf

    11 March 2013

    Like striking miners in the 1980s, criminal defenders must sometimes feel they are treated as the ‘enemy within’ by government. Pointedly overlooked for their role in expediting justice after the 2011 August riots, they have now been hit by an accelerated price tendering process which bears all the hallmarks of ...

  • News

    The Children and Families Bill could undermine gender stereotypes

    11 March 2013

    by Charlotte Bradley, a family partner, andMichelle Chance an employment partner, at Kingsley Napley On 25 February, MPs passed the new Children and Families Bill at its second reading in the House of Commons. The bill extends the statutory rights – in employment and family law ...

  • News

    Copyright

    11 March 2013

    Infringement – Authorising infringement without licence of owner – Claim arising from downloading of music from three file-sharing websites in breach of copyright EMI Records Ltd and other companies v British Sky Broadcasting Ltd and other companies: Chancery Division: ...

  • News

    Mid Staffs negligence ‘explosion’ predicted

    11 March 2013

    NHS hospitals must brace themselves for an ‘explosion’ in medical negligence claims in the aftermath of the report into the Mid Staffordshire scandal, a leading lawyer in the sector has said. Tim Gorman, partner at clinical negligence firm Axiclaim, said last month’s publication of the Francis ...

  • News

    Call to suspend Sri Lanka from Commonwealth

    11 March 2013

    A report for the Bar Human Rights Committee has called for Sri Lanka to be suspended from the Commonwealth over the impeachment of the country’s chief justice. Barrister and report author Geoffrey Robertson QC said Dr Shirani Bandaranayake (pictured), Sri Lanka’s first woman judge and chief ...

  • News

    Businesses cite human rights act in disputes

    11 March 2013

    Businesses are increasingly using human rights arguments in commercial disputes, with the number of such cases increasing from 10 to 45 in four years, new research has revealed. A study by legal information provider Sweet & Maxwell reports cases in 2012 that included a radio station ...

  • News

    Coping with the global

    11 March 2013

    Solicitors have been one of the beneficiaries and promoters of globalisation in legal services. It is not a success that could reasonably have been predicted back in the 1960s. I suppose that its causes lie in multiple factors, including: the removal of the cap on the number of partners in ...

  • News

    National firm takes up higher apprenticeship scheme

    11 March 2013

    National firm Weightmans says it is the first to offer entry into the legal profession via the new higher apprenticeship in legal services. The undergraduate level qualification, which launches today, is part of a government initiative to create more higher level vocational qualifications, increasing access to ...

  • News

    Fears grow for Saudi lawyers

    11 March 2013

    Concern is mounting for two lawyers, including the winner of the 2012 Olof Palme Prize for human rights, who have been targeted by the Saudi Arabian security forces. Human rights lawyer and former judge Sheikh Sulaiman Al-Rashudi, who is president of Saudi Arabia’s Civil and Political ...

  • News

    ATE insurers are gearing up for 1 April

    11 March 2013

    If you are an after-the-event insurer, you are probably rather busy right now. Solicitors are (metaphorically speaking) queuing outside your front door, down the street, round the corner, and in some cases halfway down the M4 to sign their clients up to policies before 1 ...

  • News

    250 jobs go as Lawyers2you becomes latest PI casualty

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    All 250 solicitors and employees of Midlands firm Blakemores, owner of the consumer brand Lawyers2you, were today told to clear their desks and go home after an intervention by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. The innovative and fast-growing firm appears to be the latest casualty of a ...

  • News

    Ending crime bosses’ ‘free ride’ on legal aid

    11 March 2013

    Amendments to the Crime and Courts Bill announced today ‘will put an end to millionaire criminals refusing to reimburse the taxpayer’ for free legal advice, the government said. The move follows a long campaign by the legal profession. Under the current system, wealthy defendants can ...

  • News

    There are no short cuts when it comes to parliamentary sovereignty

    11 March 2013

    Theresa May is no idol for human rights activists: home secretaries rarely are. She and Chris Grayling have caused much harrumphing by expressing their hostility to – either or both, it is not clear which – the European Convention on Human Rights and the Human Rights Act. A recent article ...

  • News

    SRA brings 650 actions for COLP and COFA failures

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    Enforcement action has started against almost 650 solicitors or firms that failed to complete their compliance officer nominations properly, the Solicitors Regulation Authority revealed today. Antony Townsend, chief executive of the SRA, said action was necessary after a ‘concerning and disappointing’ level of non-co-operation and ...

  • News

    Criminal legal aid procurement

    11 March 2013

    ‘Competitive tendering’ – two words that strike fear and dread into the hearts of many a hardened criminal legal aid practitioner. But what do they mean, and why, after several failed attempts, is the government so keen to introduce this into a market that is almost unanimously opposed to the ...

  • News

    Independent review of ‘pre-pack’ deals

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    The government has announced an independent review of the controversial insolvency vehicle through which DWF recently acquired the collapsed Cobbetts while leaving creditors likely to recoup little or nothing of what they are owed. The Department for Business, Innovation and Skills said the review into ...

  • News

    Blakemores intervention will cost up to £3m, managing partner says

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority’s (SRA) intervention into Midlands firm Blakemores is likely to cost the profession ‘£2-3m’, the firm’s managing partner told the Gazette the day after all 250 members of staff were told to clear their desks. Guy Barnett said that £2-3m was his estimated ...

  • News

    Family law arbitration wins

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    Does this ring a bell? You sit opposite a client whose face gradually lengthens, whose mouth drops and whose eyes widen in dismay and disbelief as you describe how long it takes to bring matrimonial financial issues to a conclusion through the court litigation process. You ...

  • News

    All doomed?

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    Monday’s news that midlands firm Blakemores, with a headcount of 250-plus, is the subject of an SRA intervention – effectively confirming that the SRA believes that the firm’s finances mean it cannot safely continue to trade – may leave principals of smaller traditionally run firms, who are staring at diminishing ...

  • News

    ATE rush prompts another ‘emergency’ cover product

    2013-03-11T00:00:00Z

    An after-the-event insurer has introduced a new emergency insurance product to cope with the surge in demand from solicitors in the run-up to 1 April. Keystone Legal said the product would enable it to issue policies ahead of the April deadline, when the Jackson reforms ...