All News articles – Page 1378
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News
Lost generation fears of Labour's Sadiq Khan
Criminal legal aid solicitors will be such an endangered species by 2015 that Labour would not need to take forward plans for price-competitive tendering in the sector. That is the startlingly frank opinion of shadow justice secretary Sadiq Khan MP, who has given the Gazette ...
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Interpreter firm still missing target, official statistics reveal
The company contracted to provide court interpreters has failed to reach its performance target after six months, statistics released today reveal. The overall success rate for jobs completed by Applied Language Solutions between 30 January and 31 August was 89%. The contract’s performance target is ...
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News
Fright night
Obiter last week asked for a fictional/historic character whose estate you’d least like to wind up. At least six readers proposed Henry VIII; ‘look what happened to Thomas Cromwell’. Genghis Khan was another popular choice. Fictional probate clients from hell ranged from Willy Wonka to ...
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Top hat and... wardrobe malfunction
Obiter is more than a little disappointed that a feature in the latest British Vogue titled ‘Law of attraction’ includes few practical answers to the sartorial challenges thrown up by the average lawyer’s diary (too many chunky knits, mainly). However, male colleagues who fear being wrong-footed ...
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Do we need more law students?
Further to the article of 24 September at Gazette Online by Ian Wimbush, I write to express my astonishment at the writer’s statement in his final paragraph: ‘That, with the recent consolidation and the increase in law students, tends to paint a rather more optimistic picture for the future of ...
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A new look for new times
The Law Society Gazette, which turns 109 next month, has gone through many iterations in print. Today’s issue introduces the first comprehensive redesign for several years and reflects our determination to ensure solicitors from every constituency of a diverse readership are seen and heard in these pages.
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News
War tribunal ‘politically motivated’
A barrister representing a prominent Muslim figure in Britain has criticised a tribunal seeking his extradition to Bangladesh on war crimes charges.
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Public procurement
Public contracts – Claimants tendering for development contract from defendant market authority By Development Ltd and others v Covent Garden Market Authority: Queen's Bench Division, Technology and Construction Court: 28 September 2012 ...
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News
Secret of my success
Such success as I had as a criminal defence lawyer can be attributed to my inspired decision to instruct Wilfrid Fordham. Before then, my principal, Simpson, had relied for criminal cases on John Averill, a small, curly haired man who became increasingly eccentric and involved ...
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Gladstone Brookes TV ad falls foul of watchdog
The advertising watchdog has ordered a claims management company (CMC) to stop showing a TV advertisement which exaggerated how long a PPI claim would take. Gladstone Brookes, which instructed almost 71,000 clients in the first eight months of 2012, ran the advertisement stating that ‘reclaiming ...
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Legal aid naivety on display
Lord McNally gave his first speech last week on legal aid since taking over the legal aid brief in the reshuffle. Hats off to him for braving the lion’s den that was the Legal Aid Practitioners Group annual conference – something of a baptism of fire. Legal aid practitioners were ...
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Comparison site attacks online document market
Online price comparison website Compare Legal Costs has partnered with East Midlands firm Nelsons to offer fixed-fee online legal documents to businesses and consumers. Nelsons provides more than 200 online documents suitable for personal or business use, covering building work to prenuptial agreements, divorce, motoring, power ...
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Pro bono group expands to Wales
The solicitors’ pro bono group LawWorks has been awarded £180,000 of lottery funding to expand its service across Britain and set up LawWorks Cymru in Wales. The charity heard last week that the Big Lottery Fund will provide the funding over the next three years enabling ...
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News
Extradition decision exposes double standards
by Nasir Hafezi While most of the British public, including the British families of recently extradited US terror suspects, welcomed home secretary Theresa May’s decision to block Gary McKinnon’s extradition to the US, many will also argue that the decision smacks of double standards and politicians ...
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News
‘No question’ of leaving ECHR - Grieve
Attorney general Dominic Grieve (pictured) has categorically stated the government has no intention of withdrawing from the European convention on human rights. Grieve told the House of Commons yesterday there is ‘no question’ of leaving the convention, despite justice secretary Chris Grayling last week hinting that ...
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Labour starts to move on from extradition errors
The Labour party has struggled with the controversial issue of the extradition arrangements it agreed with the US and other states when in government. When home secretary Theresa May announced that she would block the extradition of ‘Pentagon Hacker’ Gary McKinnon in the Commons, and ...
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News
‘Forum bar’ pledge as May blocks McKinnon extradition
Members on all sides of the House of Commons today cheered home secretary Theresa May’s announcement that she would block the extradition of ‘Pentagon hacker’ Gary McKinnon (pictured). She said she had examined medical evidence, and concluded that if extradited to the US there was a high risk that McKinnon ...
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News
Naming and shaming child offenders
by Penelope Gibbs, chair of the Standing Committee for Youth Justice and director of Transform Justice The conker murder was a horrific crime. Steven Grisales was murdered in Edmonton after remonstrating with a gang of boys who were throwing conkers at him.
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News
Officials ignored experts’ warning on interpreting contract
Senior procurement officials at the Ministry of Justice did not read a consultants’ report warning of the risks in a £42m contract to provide courtroom interpreters, it emerged at a parliamentary hearing yesterday. The House of Commons Public Accounts Committee was taking evidence on the procurement ...
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News
Hiring and firing - duty solicitor rotas
There is scene near the beginning of Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd where the hero has just lost his farm. He goes to the local town for the annual hiring fair when farm workers get taken on in new jobs. Gabriel joins the crowd of unemployed men looking ...





















