All News articles – Page 1667
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News
Legal process outsourcing facing a ‘watershed’ year
Legal process outsourcing (LPO) faces a ‘watershed’ year during which it must prove its value to law firms and in-house lawyers, a report has predicted. Consultants Fronterion said LPO gained the media’s attention during 2009 as several top law firms and in-house teams announced deals, but ...
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Criminal procedure
Bail – Credit for time served – Electric monitoring – Sentencing R v Rudie Aaron Monaghan: R v Robert Douglas Tyler: R v Chay Gilbert: R v Asim Naser: R v Aquib Khan: R v Ben Chapman: CA ...
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Criminal law – extending the jurisdiction of the magistrates’ courts
For hearings on or after 30 September 2009, significant amendments have been made to the Protection from Harassment Act 1997 by section 17 of the Domestic Violence, Crime and Victims Act 2004.
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Court cost: Supreme Court IT system was overpriced and poorly procured
It would take an imaginative New Labour apologist to argue that this government’s IT procurement record has been impressive. From the botched National Programme for IT in the NHS to a cancelled system for processing benefits commissioned by the Department for Work and Pensions, the headlines have been unremittingly negative.
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Competency test
While I accept the underlying premise of Christopher Digby-Bell’s argument regarding hourly charging, I fear he has missed one important point.
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Vietnamese death sentence fear for magic circle lawyer
Vietnamese authorities have charged a lawyer working for a magic circle firm with offences that carry the death sentence. Le Cong Dinh, a commercial and arbitration lawyer, acts as a consultant for a major UK firm that has asked not to be named. Dinh also defends democracy, human rights and ...
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Child protection must come first
It is disappointing to see James Carter (Letters, 17 December 2009) jumping to the defence of the government in wanting press reporting of children’s cases without any proper research into how this will affect children.
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Surprise increase in practising certificate numbers
The number of solicitors with practising certificates (PCs) continued its relentless rise in 2009, despite predictions in many quarters that the recession would herald a decline. Figures from the Solicitors Regulation Authority show that the number of practising solicitors totalled 112,589 at December 31, having risen ...
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Mental health charity launches jury campaign
A mental health charity has launched a campaign to make people with mental health problems eligible for jury service, with the support of the Criminal Bar Association. Charity Rethink said the UK is one of only two jurisdictions in ...
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Jackson calls for success fee reform and end to PI referral fees
Success fees and after-the-event (ATE) insurance premiums should no longer be paid by the losing party in civil court cases, a major report on civil litigation costs recommended today. Winning parties in personal injury cases should benefit from a 10% uplift in their damages award to ...
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HMRC tax break for large law firms
Large law firms struggling with cash flow problems will find it easier to obtain an extension on their tax deadline following a change in the rules adopted by HM Revenue & Customs. The new policy will extend the revenue’s Business Payments Support Service (BPSS) to large ...
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Let our dialogue begin - the SRA seeks new partnership with the profession
As the new chair of the Solicitors Regulation Authority board, I am grateful for the opportunity to contribute a regular column to the Gazette. There are many challenges ahead, which I will discuss fully in subsequent editions.
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Marketing beats referral fees
I couldn’t disagree more with Shamil Purohit’s comments concerning the need for referral fees to form an essential part of practice strategy (Letters, 7 January). Solicitors managed well enough before the existence of claims management companies and can continue to do so if they set up and implement a comprehensive ...
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Barings' global general counsel on dispelling myths and rising to the top
Sandie Okoro, global general counsel at Barings, grew up in Balham, south-west London, and by the age of nine she knew she wanted to be a lawyer. ‘I watched Crown Court on television,’ she says, referring to the ITV courtroom drama that ran from 1972 to 1984 and starred John ...
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Fast-track extradition: the European Arrest Warrant is being routinely misused
by Jago Russella chief executive of Fair Trials International In 2002 the EU created the European Arrest Warrant (EAW), a fast-track system for extraditing people from one EU country to another. It was rushed in as part of Europe’s response to the terrorist threat, and was ...
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Bahrain arbitration chamber to deal with major disputes
Major disputes between national and international companies operating in Bahrain are to be dealt with by the kingdom’s new arbitration chamber rather than its courts. The move will present lawyers from UK and other non-Bahraini firms with rights of audience in Bahrain – something that Bahraini ...
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Law Society files judicial review application over defendants’ costs cap
The Law Society has filed a judicial review application in a move to overturn new government regulations restricting the costs that can be recovered by acquitted defendants. Regulations that came into force on 31 October 2009 cap at legal aid rates the costs recoverable by ...
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Divorce process contradicts what mediation was designed to alleviate
Solicitors have adopted novel ways to help divorcing clients, providing mediation and collaborative law training, online advice and now divorce ‘vouchers’. But the process itself appears increasingly outmoded, with one party still required to ‘blame’ the other unless both are prepared to wait two years.
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Legal aid payments delayed by LSC IT glitch
Technical problems at the Legal Services Commission delayed payments that were due to all legal aid solicitors at the start of the year. The payment systems at the LSC went down for a day and a half, which meant the BACS payment run that was due ...