Latest news – Page 863

  • News

    Information commissioner opens up access to property search data

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    The information commissioner’s decision to allow free viewing of property search data held by local authorities has sparked fears that unregulated ‘cowboy companies’ will flood the search market. In a guidance note, the commissioner said that because most search data held by local authorities was environmental, ...

  • News

    Major third-party funding case fails in House of Lords

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    A major negligence case that first brought third-party funding into the public eye was struck out by the House of Lords last week at a cost of around £2.5m to the litigation funder. IM Litigation Funding admitted that the cost of losing the case, which it ...

  • News

    CPS criticised by Justice Committee over victims’ rights

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Government proclamations that the Crown Prosecution Service is a champion of victims’ rights are ‘a damaging misrepresentation of reality’, a report said this week. The report by the House of Commons Justice Committee praised the CPS for its collaborative working with police, but raised concerns over ...

  • News

    Class actions in employment tribunals called for by government research

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Unpublished government research obtained by the Gazette has called for opt-out class actions to be piloted in employment tribunals, so as to deal with the thousands of discrimination and equal pay cases clogging up the system. The report by Lexicon Ltd, whose publication has been delayed ...

  • News

    Miners win negligence payouts from solicitors over coal health claims

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Injured miners who successfully sued their former solicitors for under-settling coal health compensation claims have won tens of thousands of pounds in settlements, it has emerged. Documents obtained by the Gazette from a law firm that has handled miners’ negligence cases show that a small ...

  • News

    Legal Services Board seeks powers to impose huge fines on regulators

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    The Legal Services Board could punish the Law Society and other regulators with multi-million-pound fines if they fail to meet its regulatory objectives, under proposals published this week. The plans, which would give the LSB powers to fine the Law Society up to £28m for non-compliance, ...

  • News

    Fox Hayes £1m FSA fine still unpaid

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    The Financial Services Authority has yet to recover a penny of the £1m fine it levied against collapsed Leeds firm Fox Hayes for its part in a £15m ‘boiler room’ fraud, the Gazette can reveal. The City regulator fined Fox Hayes in February for failing ...

  • News

    PII bills to stay flat for big firms, but rise sharply for small

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Professional indemnity insurance (PII) premiums for the top 100 law firms look likely to remain flat for 2009/10 despite a slight increase in claims, insurance broker Marsh said today. Insurance bills for small firms, however, are likely to rise significantly. Marsh, which claims it brokes PII ...

  • News

    Mr Justice Gross to head Commercial Court

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    Mr Justice Gross has been appointed judge in charge of the Commercial Court with effect from 1 October. He will succeed Mr Justice Andrew Smith, whose term of office comes to an end on 30 September. Gross will have overall responsibility for ...

  • News

    Co-op launches legal services promotion campaign

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    The Co-operative has launched a high-profile campaign to promote its legal services to the 17 million weekly shoppers in its food stores. The campaign, which includes in-store radio, till screen displays and door-to-door leafleting, will last nine weeks and aims to promote awareness of the range ...

  • News

    Provision gap in the east after East Anglia law centres close

    2009-08-06T00:00:00Z

    East Anglia is currently without a single legal aid law centre after Cambridge Law Centre and Huntingdon Law Centre, the only two centres in East Anglia, closed down after their parent charity ceased trading. Advice for Life, the charity that ran both law centres, stopped trading ...

  • News

    BVT consultation

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    I write with reference to the letter in support of best value tendering (see [2009] Gazette, 23 July, 11). I am pleased to see that others recognise the potential benefits of best value tendering (BVT). I would, however, reassure Gazette readers that in developing our proposals we have spoken with ...

  • News

    National interest

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    We read with interest the Benchmarks item on forced marriage protection orders (see [2009] Gazette, 23 July, 19).

  • News

    Debt blocks access

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The final report of the Panel on Fair Access to the Professions should have been seen as the propaganda it is.

  • News

    Free dispute mechanism does the bar no credit

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    I wonder how many solicitors undertaking occasional litigation are aware of the Bar Council’s terms of work, and in particular the mechanism that comes into play if the solicitor disputes a barrister’s fee note.

  • News

    ITV and Lovells form pro bono partnership

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    ITV Legal has launched a new pro bono initiative with City firm Lovells as part of an innovative partnership programme with its panel law firms. The ITV Legal pro bono bank gives in-house lawyers at ITV the opportunity to take part in Lovells’ pro bono work. ...

  • News

    Bar Council accuses CPS of ‘Alice in Wonderland accounting’

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The Bar Council accused the Crown Prosecution Service of ‘Alice in Wonderland accounting’ this week over the CPS’s claim to have saved millions using its own lawyers rather than external advocates. In its 2007/08 annual report, the CPS said it had saved £17.1m ...

  • News

    Claims management market booms with 60% rise in number of firms

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The number of businesses entering the claims management market has risen by 60% in the past year, new figures show, while the industry’s regulator said solicitors were responsible for malpractice in personal injury claims-handling. The Claims Management Regulator’s 2009 impact assessment revealed that 2,885 businesses were ...

  • News

    Legal Services Commission asks crime lawyers to join assessment pilot

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The Legal Services Commission has called for more criminal lawyers to take part in its scheme to test different methods of assessing advocacy, after too few practitioners signed up. Piloting of the Quality Assurance for Advocates (QAA) scheme began in February at Crown courts in Birmingham, ...

  • News

    SOCA ignores call to give lawyers feedback on money laundering reports

    2009-07-30T00:00:00Z

    The Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) intends to reject a recommendation that it should provide solicitors and other professionals with feedback when they make suspicious activity reports (SARs), the Gazette has learned. A House of Lords committee last week asked SOCA to provide ‘increased levels of ...