Latest news – Page 593

  • News

    LETR report not expected until May

    18 February 2013

    Publication of the final Legal Education and Training Review (LETR) report, originally due at the end of last year, is now not expected until May, the Gazette has learned. The LETR report, commissioned by the Bar Standards Board, ILEX Professional Standards and the Solicitors Regulation ...

  • News

    Neuberger speaks out on judicial review

    18 February 2013

    The president of the Supreme Court has expressed concern about the government’s plans to limit the number of judicial reviews. Giving evidence to the House of Lords constitution committee last week, Lord Neuberger said: ‘Any attack on judicial review, or any attempt to limit it, ...

  • News

    Firms warming to outcomes-focused regulation, says the SRA

    18 February 2013

    Firms believe outcomes-focused regulation (OFR) ‘costs too much money and takes too much time’ – but they are warming to it, the Solicitors Regulation Authority reports today. A survey of 1,000 firms on the impact of the first year of OFR shows that half of respondents ...

  • News

    Lawyers slam Theresa May’s ‘populism’ on immigration

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Immigration lawyers have rejected Theresa May’s ‘populist’ assertion that judges are misinterpreting the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) and wrongfully allowing overseas offenders to escape deportation. The home secretary (pictured) has claimed that the courts are wilfully going against parliament’s wishes by refusing to ...

  • News

    QS firms poised for ABS status

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Several QualitySolicitors firms are considering moving to alternative business structure status, the group revealed today. Midlands firm QS Parkinson Wright today became the second of its stable to be licensed as an ABS by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. It joined four other ...

  • News

    Cable hails unified patent court boost

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Business secretary Vince Cable today finalised the deal for a new London-based unified patent court, which he said will deliver a £200m-a-year boost to Britain’s legal sector. The new court and patent system creates a one-stop shop for pharmaceutical, medical technology, hygiene and chemicals companies wanting ...

  • News

    Bar reviews conduct regime over ethnic disparities

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The Bar Standards Board has commissioned a review of its professional conduct complaints processes, to examine if there is any bias in the way that black and minority ethnic (BME) barristers are treated. The move follows an internal report that showed BME barristers were over-represented ...

  • News

    Cobbetts’ demise and resurrection – the full story

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Unsecured creditors of Cobbetts are likely to recover just 2p in the pound following the ‘pre-pack’ deal that saw the collapsed firm acquired by DWF, the Gazette can reveal. Owed an estimated £41m, creditors are not expected to receive any money for some years. According ...

  • News

    No new money for defence in Green’s digital justice plan

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Overlooked defence lawyers are central to criminal justice reform but will get no funding to help them engage in digital working, the justice minister said yesterday as he outlined plans to overhaul a system beset by ‘unforgivable’ delays. Damian Green (pictured) told an event organised by ...

  • News

    Bar goes ahead with aptitude test for entrants

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Prospective barristers will have to take an aptitude test as part of their application to bar school, the Bar Standards Board confirmed. All students applying for a place on the bar professional training course (BPTC) will have to take the test, at a cost of ...

  • News

    Government ‘hiding’ RTA Portal evidence, Society claims

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has accused the government of hiding key information on which it based controversial new personal injury fees. The Ministry of Justice has rejected the society’s freedom of information request for the full report into the future reform of the RTA Portal extension. ...

  • News

    High-cost cases to escape new management rules

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Commercial cases worth more than £2m will be exempt from new costs management rules, the judiciary has decided. A document issued today says that the exemption was made in an amendment to the Civil Procedure Rules finalised last week. Costs management is ...

  • News

    Concession over EU sales law

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society has welcomed an important concession from the European Parliament on the proposed common European sales law. Following lobbying by Chancery Lane, the new instrument is now to be applied only to contracts involving distance selling, particularly online transactions. The ...

  • News

    High Court challenge over 17-year-olds’ custody rights

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The High Court will hear a legal challenge to the practice of treating 17-year-olds detained in police custody as adults, in a judicial review being brought by Just For Kids Law next week. The charity questions the legality of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act code ...

  • News

    Chancery Division upgrade planned

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    The Chancellor of the High Court has today announced a review of the practice and procedure of the Chancery Division in light of the imminent Jackson and legal aid reforms. The review will consider the working of the court both in and outside London, making recommendations ...

  • News

    Top-40 firms seek ABS status, research shows

    2013-02-18T00:00:00Z

    Almost a quarter of the UK’s top-40 firms may seek to join with a non-solicitors practice in the next two years, according to research. A poll of leading firms by accountancy and investment management group Smith & Williamson found nine firms are keen on forming an ...

  • News

    Interpreters contract: inept and dangerous

    11 February 2013

    I write with regard to the court interpreter contract. Catherine Baksi is quite right still to be pursuing this particularly inept – and dangerous – example of outsourcing. Inept, since the terms of this monopolistic contract are holding the criminal justice system and we service providers to ransom.

  • News

    Lions led by donkeys

    11 February 2013

    Those of your readers with a historical interest have no doubt heeded the conduct of the first world war generals. Strategy was decided ‘on high’. Little heed was paid to the men in the trenches. Policy came from an elite talking to itself. The verdict of history? Lions led by ...

  • News

    Air ambulance confusion

    11 February 2013

    In the past few months the air ambulance community has discovered a problem where wills are being written listing the ‘Air Ambulance Service’ as a beneficiary. While the name ‘Air Ambulance Service’ has been used as a general phrase to describe services across the ...

  • News

    LSC drops legal aid contract changes

    11 February 2013

    The Legal Services Commission has agreed to drop controversial changes to ongoing legal aid contracts following talks with the Law Society. The commission is tendering for new contracts in the runup to legal aid reforms coming into effect on 1 April and had sought to ...