Last 3 months headlines – Page 1304

  • News

    Decision to scrap the trainee minimum salary was ill-considered and nonsensical

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    by Hekim Hannan, chair of the Junior Lawyers Division Last week the SRA abolished the trainee minimum salary, currently £18,590 in Central London and £16,650 elsewhere.

  • News

    Co-op goes nationwide with 3,000 new hires

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    The Co-operative Legal Services (CLS) today announced plans to recruit 3,000 staff and extend its legal services to all 330 of its high street banks, creating the largest consumer law business in the country. CLS, which in March became one of the first alternative business structures, ...

  • News

    'Customer' or 'client'?

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    I popped in to the doctor’s yesterday but I had to wait because my GP was busy with another customer. Actually, I was a bit late for my appointment. I’d just got off the phone to my child’s teacher. She’s always keen to chat because my family is one of ...

  • News

    Official statistics reveal ALS performance shortfall

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Three months into its contract to provide court interpreters Applied Language Solutions (ALS) was not meeting its performance targets, statistics published today reveal. Data provided to the Ministry of Justice by ALS, showed that from 30 January to 30 April 2012, ALS provided an interpreter in 81% of the cases ...

  • News

    Going ‘no comment’: a delicate balancing act

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Sam Hallam’s conviction for the murder of Essayas Kassahun was overturned last week by the Court of Appeal, after he had spent seven years in jail. Barrister Henry Blaxland QC said Hallam, who was 18 when sentenced, had been the victim of a miscarriage of justice ...

  • News

    Insolvency exemption in latest no win, no fee U-turn

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Insolvency cases will be exempt from no win, no fee reforms until April 2015, the government has revealed in its second climb-down in its struggle to overhaul the civil justice system. Justice minister Jonathan Djanogly said today that insolvency practitioners need longer to adjust to ...

  • News

    Young ones face the music

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    They braced themselves like naughty schoolchildren outside the headmaster’s office expecting a thrashing. The Junior Lawyers Division was always on a hiding to nothing by electing to attend last week’s public session of the Solicitors Regulation Authority board. ‘Do we get to actually speak in the ...

  • News

    Clutching at Straw

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Jack Straw has trousered well north of £100,000 in extra-parliamentary earnings since the last election. A commodity trader, a private equity house and even a military thinktank have all paid handsomely for the peripatetic Blackburn MP’s services, as Obiter has recounted.

  • News

    Foot loose

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    HM Judiciary, represented here by the master of the rolls and lord chief justice, hit a distinctive sartorial note on Monday’s London Legal Walk. T-shirts and trainers were worn, but frequently over double-cuffed shirts and ties, and creased trousers. Exotic headgear was optional. Despite the mature ...

  • News

    Close shave

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    With his boss in Russia promoting London’s legal services, it was left to under-secretary of state for justice Jonathan Djanogly to take justice questions in parliament last week. Responding to Liberal Democrat Tom Brake, the minister, known for his attention to detail during the passage of the Legal Aid, Sentencing ...

  • News

    Bigamy and high stakes

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    The report that devotees may be photographed shaking Bill Clinton’s hand for $1,000 a time reminded me of the great 19th century dancer and courtesan Rosanna James, who ennobled herself as Maria Dolores de Porres y Montes. Better known as Lola Montez (pictured), she was reputed to charge Bostonians a ...

  • News

    No win, no fee climb down: a case of double standards

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Is the government losing its nerve on no win, no fee reforms? The overhaul of the civil justice system was supposed to have been rubber-stamped when the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act was given royal assent earlier this month.

  • News

    Co-op targets family legal aid - with loyalty points

    2012-05-24T00:00:00Z

    Co-operative Legal Services (CLS) has a family legal aid contract and is already working on cases, ahead of the launch of its family law service in July, it revealed today. The news followed the announcement of the mutual’s plans to recruit 3,000 staff and expand its ...

  • News

    Six months to end 'indiscriminate' prisoner voting ban

    2012-05-23T00:00:00Z

    Britain has six months to draft new laws to end its blanket ban on prisoners voting in elections or face penalties totalling millions of pounds, it has emerged following a ruling from Europe’s human rights court. The court ruled that Britain’s ‘automatic and indiscriminate’ disqualification of ...

  • News

    Judicial diversity must start with lawyers, says Goldring

    2012-05-23T00:00:00Z

    Senior judges will reach out to the legal profession by mentoring those who feel excluded from high office. Speaking at a conference yesterday, Senior Presiding Judge Lord Justice Goldring revealed members of the profession previously put off because of their gender, race or sexuality will be ...

  • News

    The Jackson review - where are we now?

    2012-05-23T00:00:00Z

    Now that the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders (LASPO) Act has entered the statute book, I'm looking at where the government is up to in terms of the overall Jackson package of reforms for personal injury compensation.

  • News

    Tomlinson judge appointed first chief coroner

    2012-05-22T00:00:00Z

    The judge who presided at the 2011 inquest that returned a verdict of unlawful killing on newspaper seller Ian Tomlinson was today named as the first Chief Coroner of England & Wales. The Ministry of Justice said that Peter Thornton QC will improve the coronial system ...

  • News

    Social exclusivity ‘rife’ in profession

    2012-05-22T00:00:00Z

    Social exclusivity is increasing in the legal profession, according to a new analysis of lawyers’ schooling published today. Legal recruiter Laurence Simons studied almost 50,000 professionals working in London using the networking site LinkedIn. It found that more than 15% of lawyers - more than 7,000 ...

  • News

    Making the law work for deaf people

    2012-05-22T00:00:00Z

    Until I started working with the team at the Royal Association for Deaf People’s Deaf Law Centre (RAD DLC) I wasn’t aware of the difficulties that so many D/deaf** and hard of hearing people face when accessing legal services. When I met Rob Wilks, head of RAD’s legal team, in ...

  • News

    Lawyers’ right to strike

    2012-05-21T00:00:00Z

    As social ties are stretched to breaking point by the economic crisis, an interesting question arises: do lawyers have the right to strike, and if so in what circumstances? The focus here is not on the legal right granted to citizens, including lawyers, by the law of a particular country, ...