Latest news


Dame Elizabeth Filkin joins CILEx board as lay member

5 April 2018

Dame Elizabeth Filkin, a former Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, has become one of four lay members appointed to the new Chartered Institute of Legal Executives group board. The move comes as CILEx introduces a group structure with three companies


Indemnity insurance reforms “will damage small firms”

4 April 2018

Indemnity insurance reforms put forward by the Solicitors Regulation Authority last month will damage the small firms the regulator is trying to help, a specialist law firm has warned. Legal Risk LLP attacked SRA plans aimed at reducing the burden of indemnity insurance.


Grenfell Tower council’s legal budget tops £5m

4 April 2018

The local authority budget for specialist legal advice and IT connected with the criminal investigation and public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire has been increased to £5m. The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea approved the new figure at a raucous council meeting. Most will go to law firm DWF LLP.


Partner struck off for dishonesty after concealing payments to himself

4 April 2018

A partner has been struck off for transferring over £40,000 to his own bank account while claiming it was used to pay a costs draftsman and a marketing company. The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal said Mohammed Asif Din “knew the money was being paid to him”.


Court of Protection solicitor convicted of neglect following elderly mother’s death

3 April 2018

An associate in a regional law firm’s Court of Protection team has been convicted of the wilful neglect of her own elderly mother, who died in squalor despite the solicitor having power of attorney to act on her behalf.


Third of criminal law barristers consider leaving jobs as CBA launches direct action

3 April 2018

The depth of despondency among criminal law barristers has been revealed in a survey as direct action by the Criminal Bar Association began on Easter Day. A survey of over 4,000 barristers found that over a third of criminal barristers were dissatisfied with their careers and considering alternatives or planning to leave.


Tribunal lifts restrictions on solicitor who “carved out new area of expertise”

3 April 2018

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has removed the conditions on the practising certificate of a solicitor fined for allowing improper payments to be made out of client account. It said he had shown “insight and remorse” and “carved out a new area of expertise in which his previous misconduct was unlikely to be repeated”.


“Insane” to bar solicitors from working for unregulated firms, online pioneer says

29 March 2018

An online legal services pioneer has described the current rules preventing solicitors from practising at unregulated firms as “insane”. Former solicitor Tessa Shepperson backed plans by the Solicitors Regulation Authority to change the rules – a move strongly resisted by the Law Society.


Office manager’s niece entitled to maternity pay, says judge

29 March 2018

A young woman who worked for a Derbyshire sole practitioner was an employee and entitled to maternity pay, the First Tier Tribunal has held. Rebecca Scothern was the niece of Karen Burley, office manager at Paul Brook Solicitors in Chesterfield.


Non-lawyers disciplined for disclosure failures during Cobbetts collapse

29 March 2018

Tribunal judgments in the cases of two non-lawyers involved in the finances of defunct law firm Cobbetts LLP have been published, marking the latest chapter in the disciplinary aftermath of the failure. The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal approved agreed outcomes relating to allegations against the firm’s former financial director and partnership tax accountant.

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