All Opinion articles – Page 324

  • Johnhyde
    Opinion

    Channel 4 is wrong to screen The Murder Trial

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    The strangest moment I ever faced while reporting a murder trial was some years ago in Braintree. The victim had been killed outside a nightclub and the DJ was giving evidence about the last time he saw the accused: dancing enthusiastically to ‘Oops Upside your Head’ (this really does constitute ...

  • Catherinebaksi
    Opinion

    Channel 4 was right to screen The Murder Trial

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Last night’s two-hour TV documentary about the Scottish trial of fruit and veg seller Nat Fraser for the murder of his wife Arlene offered a fascinating insight in the reality and banality of the courtroom. Despite the horrific and extraordinary nature of the offence, the programme, even with its sometimes ...

  • Opinion

    Speedier ABS processing

    15 July 2013

    In response to Adam Entwistle's letter which was critical of the time taken by the SRA to process an ABS licensing application, I would like to reassure potential applicants that this has speeded up significantly since we introduced changes earlier this year. We listened to the profession, and took into ...

  • Opinion

    Should we allow non-graduate entry?

    15 July 2013

    SRA chair Charles Plant says there should be a return to non-graduate entry to the profession. Over the years I have thought this too. After all, I am a five-year man myself. At the end of this month I retire and my views have changed. The law too has changed, ...

  • Opinion

    Using Google Analytics

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    GA is a simple piece of code/script that drops a cookie onto a visitor, to track them and their behaviour whilst on your website.

  • Opinion

    Hollow laugh with High Court application

    15 July 2013

    There is still amusement in the law. I delivered an application to the High Court today. Royal Mail had lost my previous bundle and I thought it best to hand over a substitute in person (ironically, the case is about a judge who believed in the efficacy of the postal ...

  • Opinion

    Axa calls for three-day limit on whiplash claims

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Whiplash claims should be made within three days of the alleged accident and include evidence of physical injury if they are to succeed, insurance giant Axa said today. The recommendations are part of a wishlist for the government to adopt on whiplash, copying models already in place in France and ...

  • Rachel rothwell
    Opinion

    Tactics emerge in costs budgeting

    15 July 2013

    Some interesting points emerged in relation to costs budgeting at IBC Legal’s Impact of Jackson conference last week. By now, many litigators will have had to knuckle down and complete Precedent H – the form through which they must provide the opposing party with an estimate of their costs in ...

  • Joshua Rozenberg
    Opinion

    Why the Magna Carta still has relevance today

    15 July 2013

    What shall we be doing in the summer of 2015? A general election is scheduled for 7 May. If Theresa May gets her way, we shall be voting on whether to denounce a list of rights and liberties that will have been binding on our rulers for little more than ...

  • johnhyde
    Opinion

    Defendant firms are turkeys protecting Christmas

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    This may surprise you, but not all my correspondence is adoring fanmail. Indeed, on some occasions people tell me rather forcefully that I’m wrong, and often in the kind of language that gives our email filter system nightmares. The majority of angry responses come from defendant firms who take issue ...

  • Lesleygraves
    Opinion

    Counting the cost of interventions

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    The cost of law firm failures is being felt across the solicitors’ profession. The Gazette reported recently that the unprecedented bill for the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) intervening in failing firms means that we will all have to pay an extra £23 each towards the compensation fund in the coming ...

  • Opinion

    Open justice? Open court listings would be a start

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    A century ago, in Scott v Scott (1913), the House of Lords affirmed the common law rule that courts must administer justice in public. Just last week, Lord Justice Kay cited the ruling when rejecting a request by a Saudi prince for litigation to be heard in private. He ruled: ...

  • Jonathan Goldsmith
    Opinion

    The jury’s out on the European Public Prosecutor

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    Ladies and gentlemen, this is the case of United Kingdom vs the European Public Prosecutor’s Office. 

  • Opinion

    PI firms not playing by the rules

    15 July 2013

    In the new personal injury claims environment we all have to play by the new rules. The trouble is that there are many firms which are not. I have seen adverts on the internet offering, without qualification, ‘100% compensation’, but when the firm in question is called the offer is ...

  • Opinion

    Helping out litigants in person

    2013-07-15T00:00:00Z

    A report has been published by the Judicial Working Group on litigants in person. It explores possible judicial responses to the expected rise in litigants in person caused by the recent cuts to public funding for legal aid.

  • Opinion

    Lewisham Hospital prompts tribunal of the people

    15 July 2013

    It is increasingly obvious that citizens worldwide are becoming disenchanted and disengaged with established government. This has been manifest in various forms of political and economic meltdown. Underpinning all the movements is a desire for accountability and transparency. Where this is not forthcoming ordinary people are finding ways of exercising ...

  • Opinion

    Standing up to the insurance industry

    15 July 2013

    The Law Society deserves to be praised for at long last standing up to the insurance industry. There are critics who (justifiably) will say all of this is too little too late, but the campaign is something which is very close to my heart. We launched Review My Claim earlier ...

  • Opinion

    Stop this PI lawyer-bashing

    15 July 2013

    I read with sadness the letter from Rob Barley. I work for a small practice which mainly deals with personal injury claims. I have in the past month received at least five calls to my firm’s telephone number asking me if I am sure I have not been injured in ...

  • Opinion

    London legal pre-eminence is not set in stone

    15 July 2013

    Honeyed words from Abhijit Mukhopadhyay, in-house head of legal at the multi-billion-pound international Hinduja Group. ‘There is a global respect for English law and London lawyers are the most experienced in the world,’ he told delegates at the Law Society’s International Marketplace Conference last week. Yet the global market is ...

  • Opinion

    'Posturing' on victim levy

    15 July 2013

    How right Joshua Rozenberg is to pour scorn on the legerdemain of the Ministry of Justice over levying the victim surcharge. This has been brought into effect irrespective of any of the philosophical underpinning or due process safeguards applying to all other financial sanctions. ‘Looking tough’ in this way is ...