Latest news – Page 881

  • News

    Talks deadlocked on new process for road traffic claims

    2009-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Government plans to introduce a new process for handling low-value road traffic claims this autumn are under serious threat, the Gazette can reveal. Talks between all sides to define how the process should work – which it had been hoped would be completed by Christmas – ...

  • News

    Youth custody review cuts imprisonment by 42%

    2009-04-23T00:00:00Z

    A pilot scheme to review youth imprisonment cases has cut the number of custodial sentences by 42%, a study revealed this week. In a joint report on custody panels, the Howard League for Penal Reform and the Local Government Association said the number of young people ...

  • News

    Law Society to hire diversity head

    2009-04-23T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society is proposing to hire a high-profile head of diversity as part of a new framework to promote equality and diversity in the profession. Other measures, expected to be discussed at Council this week, include signing up 100 law firms to a Diversity Charter to be launched this ...

  • News

    Herbert Smith managing partner predicts pay freeze

    2009-04-23T00:00:00Z

    Salaries at City law firms are likely to remain static for some years, Herbert Smith managing partner David Willis (pictured) predicted this week after his firm announced 84 job cuts in London. Salaries will be frozen for all staff except trainees in the firm’s London office ...

  • News

    Exhibition celebrates 60 years of legal aid

    2009-04-22T00:00:00Z

    Sixty years after the birth of legal aid, 83% of the general public say they have little or no knowledge of the scheme, according to new research. To fill the gap, and to mark the anniversary of the passing of the Legal Aid Act in July, the Legal Services Commission ...

  • News

    City giant announces job cuts

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    City firm Herbert Smith will cut up to 84 London staff and freeze salaries across its London office, the firm announced today (20 April). Up to 30 fee-earners will be made redundant as part of the cuts, while the pay freeze, which comes in to force in September, will ...

  • News

    Taylor Wessing asks staff to buy extra holiday

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    City firm Taylor Wessing is to cut up to nine associates and nine support staff and has asked all staff to buy extra holiday by means of a salary cut. The firm said today (21 April) that the latter proposal is ‘one of a number of ...

  • News

    LDP disadvantage

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    The article regarding the introduction of legal disciplinary practices concluded that because only 14 LDPs were up and running on the day the new regime came into force, the profession has ‘snubbed’ the whole idea.

  • News

    Mistaken identity

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    It does not follow, as argued in your Opinion column last week, that ‘solicitors are going to be early adopters of the ID infrastructure, whether they like it or not’.

  • News

    Unnecessary veto

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    Joshua Rozenberg asks if the attorney general should have a power of veto over arrests for war crimes (see [2009] Gazette, 9 April, 7). Such a veto over judicial arrest warrants is unnecessary, given that there is no evidence that this power has been misused by the judiciary.

  • News

    Associate prosecutor fears

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    It is a long time since I practised criminal law, but I have been a civil courts judge for 16 years so I know the value of good advocacy anywhere. I would like to comment on the letter ‘For the defence’ from the chief crown prosecutor Barry Hughes...

  • News

    Personal injury fraudster found guilty of contempt

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    In a landmark move against fraudulent personal injury claims, the High Court has found a claimant in contempt of court for exaggerating her injuries. She must now pay her own £125,000 legal bill, a £2,500 fine for contempt and half the defendant’s legal costs.

  • News

    KBF executives set up new legal lending firm

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    Executives behind the Iceland-funded legal lender that ­collapsed amid last autumn’s banking crisis have launched a new venture, offering a similar service based on what they say is a more robust funding model. Key Business Finance (KBF), which supplied nearly 15% of law firms in ...

  • News

    John Wotton wins Law Society deputy vice-presidential election

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    John Wotton of magic circle firm Allen & Overy is set to become president of the Law Society in 2011 after this week winning the election for deputy vice-president. Wotton, 54, was a partner at Allen & Overy for 23 years and is now a consultant ...

  • News

    Plan for chief legal officer splits local government solicitors

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    A proposal that every local authority be required to appoint a qualified chief legal officer has attracted split responses from 70 different organisations. The Law Society and Solicitors in Local Government have proposed a change in the law to create the new role, replacing that ...

  • News

    Law Society to shoulder 90% of the cost of Legal Services Board

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    The Law Society will have to bear more than 90% of the initial set-up and running costs of the Legal Services Board and Office for Legal Complaints under plans published last week. Proposals for a levy to raise £15.1m for the new bodies appear ...

  • News

    Family practitioners condemn the government’s flat-fee proposals

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    Practitioner groups have condemned as ‘disastrous’ and ‘ill-considered’ proposals to change the way family lawyers are paid, claiming they will leave vulnerable families and children without adequate representation. The Family Justice Council said plans to introduce a fixed-fee advocacy scheme for family legal aid cases from ...

  • News

    MoJ and Insurance Fraud Bureau to share data on fraud

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    Data on criminal syndicates and solicitors involved in personal injury compensation scams will be shared between the Ministry of Justice and the Insurance Fraud Bureau (IFB) under a new agreement, the Gazette has learned. The agreement will allow the MoJ and IFB, the insurance industry-funded fraud ...

  • News

    Top city firms tight-lipped on future of graduate training schemes

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    Two top City firms have remained tight-lipped over the future of their specialist graduate training schemes after asking prospective trainees to start work a year later than planned. Magic circle firms Clifford Chance and Linklaters, which have asked prospective trainees to volunteer to defer for a ...

  • News

    Olswang to make patent attorney partner in LDP move

    2009-04-17T00:00:00Z

    City firm Olswang has become one of the first big corporate firms to take advantage of new business structure changes enabled by the Legal Services Act. The firm has applied to have one of its patent attorneys made a partner in the firm following the promotion ...