Headlines – Page 1536
-
News
Acting the part
Chris Partington (pictured, right) loves a challenge. Over the past three years, the wills, trusts and probate lawyer at Sale firm Slater Heelis Collier Littler has climbed Kilimanjaro, tackled the National Three Peaks climb and has now cycled 100 miles coast to coast in a day – all in aid ...
-
News
Hot under the collar
After a half a decade studying sexism in the criminal justice system, those doughty campaigners at the Fawcett Society say they have found ‘clear examples of attempts to make female workers fit the male mould’. Quite literally, in the case of some police forces, which have been caught trying to ...
-
News
Is speedy hi-tech justice necessarily better justice?
Since 2006, ‘simple, speedy, summary’ justice has been the mantra of successive justice secretaries. It is at the heart of government reforms to ‘rebalance the criminal justice system and increase public confidence’. The latest method to achieve this is the virtual court, which enables (and will ...
-
News
Defendant escapes confiscation because no advocate would take legal aid fee
A defendant has escaped confiscation proceedings because she was unable to find an advocate willing to accept the legal aid rate to represent her. The court’s decision, upheld in the Court of Appeal, will fuel an ongoing dispute over the levels of legal aid fees. ...
-
News
Solicitors believe judicial appointments ‘not for me’, JAC research finds
Official research published today reveals a ‘widespread and underlying perception’ of ‘inherent prejudice’ in the judicial application process and suggests that solicitors still see the bench as a career for ‘other people’. The study, sponsored by the Judicial Appointments Commission, surveyed barristers and solicitors eligible for ...
-
News
Sole practitioners condemn SRA risk-assessment plans
Sole practitioners have condemned as ‘outrageous’ and ‘totally intrusive’ plans by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to require commercially sensitive information to carry out risk assessments. SRA head of policy Bronwen Still told the annual general meeting of the Sole Practitioners Group (SPG) that firms ...
-
News
Local authorities face action over obstructing property searches
Private search companies are threatening to get tough with councils who block access to property search information or fail to comply with the government’s charging guidance. The Council of Property Search Organisations (CoPSO) said this week that it would take action against local authorities that ...
-
News
BVT ‘threatens criminal chambers as well as solicitors’ firms’
Criminal chambers as well as solicitors’ firms will go to the wall under best value tendering (BVT), practitioners have warned while calling for the profession to unite on the issue.
-
News
Busy time for Lord Hunt with new review
Lord Hunt of Wirral must be a workaholic. He is already leading the mammoth Law Society-commissioned review of legal regulation, but one review at a time is not enough, it seems. Yesterday, Hunt’s firm, Beachcroft, announced that their peer partner has kicked off a ‘strategic review of banking in Guernsey’.
-
News
Lunch is for wimps – and law firms?
I’m entering a new phase of life this month – no, I’m not getting a tattoo or joining the Royal Marines, I’m getting married (equally permanent, and just as dangerous).
-
News
Clifford Chance to cut equity partners
Magic circle firm Clifford Chance will report a 5% fall in revenue and profits ‘significantly down’ on last year’s £1.33bn, according to the firm’s global managing partner David Childs. He said the firm will cut around 15% of its equity partners at the end of its ongoing staff restructuring. ...
-
News
Assisted suicide – killing with kindness?
Is helping a terminally ill loved one die with dignity murder or compassion? Could assisted suicide open the floodgates to society ridding itself of elderly people, invalids and the disabled, because they are surplus to requirements?
-
News
Straw apologises for probation failings
The justice secretary has apologised to the families of the two murdered French students for the ‘serious failures across the criminal justice system’ that left one of the defendants free to kill when he should have been incarcerated. Dano Sonnex and Nigel farmer were found guilty ...
-
News
Eagle promoted at Ministry of Justice
Junior minister Maria Eagle MP, a former solicitor, was today promoted by under-fire prime minister Gordon Brown. Eagle, a parliamentary under-secretary of state at the Ministry of Justice since June 2007, was today appointed minister of state at the MoJ, one of several new ministerial ...
-
News
Legal aid means testing to hit the Crown court in January
Defendants convicted in the Crown court will have to pay a contribution towards their legal expenses under government plans to redirect legal aid funds more appropriately. The announcement follows a consultation on the proposal to introduce means testing in the Crown court. Under the proposed scheme, ...
-
News
Former justice minister cleared of code breach
Former justice minister Shahid Malik (pictured) has been cleared of breaching the ministerial code over a rental agreement. Malik stepped down last month while the prime minister’s independent adviser on the code, Sir Philip Mawer, examined the financial arrangements of a £100-a-week rent deal on a ...
-
News
Law firms must adopt a mature attitude to age
During a recent speech to aspiring lawyers at the College of Law, Cherie Booth QC mentioned age and how ‘we’ have not got our heads around the issue.
-
News
Marketing activity needs to complement legal services
I had the privilege of studying under Dr Shiv Mathur, former marketing guru at Cass Business School (he retired in 1997).
-
News
Home Office plans big cuts in forensic science service
The Forensic Science Service (FSS) could cut up to 800 jobs in a move to make it more competitive. The Home Office confirmed the company, which is owned by the government and analyses crime scene evidence for the police, has begun a consultation with its staff ...
-
News
Chancery Lane defers decision on compensation fund levy
The Law Society’s Council today deferred a final decision on the level of this year’s compensation fund levy until its next monthly meeting in July. Society president Paul Marsh said this was to accommodate further discussion with the SRA on the matter. Papers for today’s meeting ...





















