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Truss targets more support to help public with lawyer-light online courts

1 March 2017

A green paper on early legal support will help the public get to grips with online courts, justice secretary Liz Truss has said. She said online courts would mean “fewer lawyers” were needed to help people navigate their way through a “cumbersome and complex” system.


Anti-trafficking charity hopes law firm will generate income from private work

1 March 2017

A charity that provides legal help to the victims of trafficking and slavery has created a law firm to service immigration and employment law private clients, with the aim of funding its charitable work. It launched north London firm Saltworks – a community interest company – this week.


LeO’s bid to give complaints data to comparison websites delayed by IT problems

1 March 2017

Plans by the Legal Ombudsman is to give comparison websites details of complaints against law firms will be delayed by the service’s computer problems, it has emerged. Kathryn Stone, the chief legal ombudsman, said she believed comparison websites “really are the disruptors” in the legal services market.


ABS-hungry NewLaw eyes more joint ventures

28 February 2017

Pioneering law firm NewLaw is set to create more alternative business structure (ABS) joint ventures this year, it has emerged. The firm – which was itself just the fourth ABS to be licensed – already has seven joint ventures, with partners including the British Medical Association, the Royal College of Nursing and insurer Ageas.


Law firms “more likely to pay cyber crooks” who lock their IT systems

28 February 2017

More than a quarter of law firms that fall victim to ‘ransomware’ – software used by cyber crooks to block access to computer systems – end up paying £5,000 or more to retrieve their data, according to research.


LSB and SRA accused of putting too much emphasis on competition

28 February 2017

Both the Legal Services Board and the Solicitors Regulation Authority are putting too much emphasis on promoting competition at the expense of the other regulatory objectives they are meant to uphold, the Law Society has claimed. But the SRA has said its plan to allow practising solicitors to operate from unregulated businesses is “overdue”.


More dire results for Slater & Gordon as it admits survival depends on lenders

27 February 2017

Slater & Gordon will not be able to pay off the bank debt that falls due next year and will need the continuing support of its lenders “to continue as a going concern”, it admitted today while unveiling more disastrous financial results that showed a 38% fall in income in the UK.


In-house lawyer wins tribunal agreement to remove practising restrictions

27 February 2017

The head of a council’s child protection legal team has successfully removed all the conditions on his practising certificate imposed by the Solicitors Regulation Authority in the wake of a finding against him by a disciplinary tribunal.


Magic circle firm adopts AI to simplify complex compliance issue

27 February 2017

Magic circle law firm Clifford Chance has for the second time in four months deployed artificial intelligence in a standalone product aimed at assisting clients to comply with complex regulatory changes. It has devised an online tool to enable financial institutions to make sense of MiFID2.


PI reforms boost NAH share price but provoke fury from claimant lawyers

24 February 2017

Shares in legal marketing business NAHL plc – owner of National Accident Helpline – leapt 20% yesterday on the back of the government’s plans to reform low-value personal injury claims, one of the few positive reactions to the news from the claimant side.

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