All articles by Jonathan Rayner – Page 50

  • News

    Costs regime bad for environment

    2010-01-21T00:00:00Z

    The UK’s ‘shabby and mean-spirited’ costs regime has halted more than half the cases referred for judicial review by an environmental charity, a report has revealed. The Environmental Law Foundation (ELF), a charity that helps people use the law to protect and improve their surroundings, said ...

  • News

    Government backs fairer access proposals

    2010-01-21T00:00:00Z

    The government signed up to wide-ranging proposals to help young people from less privileged backgrounds enter the legal and other professions this week, but rejected plans to give tax incentives or other ‘targeted support’ to law firms to help them achieve this.

  • News

    Tax lawyers report rise in tribunal appeals work

    2010-01-20T00:00:00Z

    Tax litigation lawyers have seen a 14% increase in tribunal cases as a result of more aggressive tax collection by HM Revenue & Customs. A report by accountants UHY Hacker Young found that tax tribunals cases grew from 4,311 in 2007 to 4,897 in 2008, with ...

  • News

    Vietnamese death sentence fear for magic circle lawyer

    2010-01-14T00:00:00Z

    Vietnamese authorities have charged a lawyer working for a magic circle firm with offences that carry the death sentence. Le Cong Dinh, a commercial and arbitration lawyer, acts as a consultant for a major UK firm that has asked not to be named. Dinh also defends democracy, human rights and ...

  • News

    Mental health charity launches jury campaign

    2010-01-14T00:00:00Z

    A mental health charity has launched a campaign to make people with mental health problems eligible for jury service, with the support of the Criminal Bar Association. Charity Rethink said the UK is one of only two jurisdictions in ...

  • News

    SRA warns lawyers acting in civil recovery claims against shoplifters

    2010-01-14T00:00:00Z

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority has warned lawyers not to ‘diminish public trust in the profession’ when acting in civil recovery claims against alleged shoplifters. The warning arose in response to a report by the Citizens Advice Bureau (CAB) on the fines levied and tactics used by ...

  • News

    New government client care regulations ‘excessive’

    2010-01-13T00:00:00Z

    New government regulations requiring solicitors to inform clients about what professional indemnity insurance they have in place have been described as ‘excessive’. The Provision of Services Regulations 2009, introduced by the Department for Business Innovation and Skills (BIS) in December, require lawyers to provide information on ...

  • News

    LSB research reveals public ‘don’t know what lawyers do’

    2010-01-07T00:00:00Z

    More than two-thirds of consumers have ‘little or no knowledge’ of what lawyers do, research published last week has revealed. A YouGov survey of 2,033 individuals commissioned by the Legal Services Board found that 68% were largely ignorant of what lawyers did. And less than half ...

  • News

    Local authorities team up to buy legal services

    2010-01-07T00:00:00Z

    Birmingham City Council has negotiated a deal that will see it join forces with 38 other local authorities to purchase legal services from 11 law firm panels, involving 12 firms. The council has also extended an invitation to every other local authority in England and ...

  • News

    Self-defence is no defence

    2010-01-04T00:00:00Z

    Pre-election promises aren’t worth the ballot paper they are written on, so don’t take too seriously the sinister spectacle of Labour and the Tories espousing the same populist cause.The populist knee-jerk of the moment is the old chestnut of how far a householder can legally go to protect his property ...

  • News

    Investigating the world of private detectives: it's not quite Magnum PI

    2009-12-17T00:00:00Z

    ‘The dame was dressed like a million dollars and had legs that would make permafrost steam. But Zak Flint, private eye, knew it was all smoke and mirrors. He had the scars to prove it…’

  • News

    European Court of Human Rights in 'crisis'

    2009-12-17T00:00:00Z

    Europe’s foremost human rights court is in ‘crisis’, with a backlog of more than 120,000 cases waiting up to seven years to be heard, lawyers have warned. Leading human rights barrister Lord Lester QC said last week that the influx of new states since the ...

  • News

    Contingency fees regulation will drive lawyers out of the market

    2009-12-17T00:00:00Z

    Government proposals to regulate contingency fees will drive lawyers out of the market and leave 500,000 people a year without legal representation, employment lawyers have warned. Draft regulations published this month by the Ministry of Justice propose a 25% cap on the proportion of a client’s ...

  • News

    It’s time to stop taking liberties with human rights

    2009-12-16T00:00:00Z

    Adolf Hitler wouldn’t have known a human right if he had found one nibbling on his breakfast pumpernickel. We’re all agreed on that. The British people, on the other hand, are upstanding citizens who champion the weak and whose love of cricket embodies our profound devotion to fair play.

  • News

    It’s time to stop taking liberties with human rights

    2009-12-16T00:00:00Z

    Adolf Hitler wouldn’t have known a human right if he had found one nibbling on his breakfast pumpernickel. We’re all agreed on that. The British people, on the other hand, are upstanding citizens who champion the weak and whose love of cricket embodies our profound devotion to fair play.

  • News

    New guidelines for lawyers on assessing mental capacity

    2009-12-14T00:00:00Z

    New guidelines to help solicitors, doctors and other professionals assess mental capacity have been jointly issued by the Law Society and the British Medical Association. The guidelines, Assessment of Mental Capacity, set out best practice for dealing with people lacking capacity to make important decisions, ...

  • News

    Europe appoints new justice head

    2009-12-10T00:00:00Z

    Europe has appointed its first commissioner to hold a separate justice portfolio, taking a ‘step in the right direction’ towards separating the conflicting demands of justice and security.

  • News

    Criminal legal aid firms threaten boycott of BVT pilot

    2009-12-10T00:00:00Z

    More than 120 criminal legal aid firms will refuse to take part in Legal Services Commission plans to pilot best value tendering (BVT) unless they are indemnified against transfer of undertaking, protection of employment (TUPE) actions arising from it, the Gazette has learned. The commission wants ...

  • News

    Lawyers in UK and Ireland hit hardest by problems in property market

    2009-12-03T00:00:00Z

    Only Ireland has suffered more job losses within its legal profession than the UK, the director general of the Law Society of Ireland said last week. Ken Murphy told delegates at a Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe (CCBE) meeting in Brussels that ...

  • News

    Vulnerable defendants not helped in understanding court proceedings

    2009-12-03T00:00:00Z

    Defendants with learning disabilities are routinely deprived of help with understanding criminal court proceedings, a report from the Prison Reform Trust has revealed. The report, published this week, found there was no systematic procedure for identifying adults with learning disabilities. Some defendants did not know why ...