Latest news


“Change in law needed” to open up Legal Ombudsman to clients of unregulated firms, says boss

26 April 2016

Only a change in the law would allow the Legal Ombudsman to cover complaints from consumers of unregulated law firms, the chair of the organisation’s governing body has said as he called on paralegals to campaign for access to the redress scheme.


Americans to revisit ABSs after finding “no evidence” of harm to date

26 April 2016

The evidence to date has not backed up the critics of alternative business structures, the American Bar Association has said as it announced it is to revisit the merits of allowing them just three years after its last investigation kept the door firmly closed.


Partner sanctioned for not reporting firm’s financial problems

25 April 2016

A solicitor has avoided an appearance before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal after accepting a rebuke for failing to report his firm’s “serious financial difficulties”. The firm owed both the taxman and its bank hundreds of thousands of pounds.


Suspension for barrister who told chambers he was working pro bono when client was actually paying

25 April 2016

A family law barrister who told his chambers that he was acting for a lay client pro bono, and then tried to hide the e-mail trail that proved the client had actually paid him more than £15,000, has been reprimanded and suspended, among several recent Bar disciplinary rulings.


Money laundering reforms “would make SARs regime risk based”

25 April 2016

The government has pledged radical reform of the suspicious activity reports regime and its replacement with an intelligence-led, risk-based focus. The proposals include removal of the existing consent regime, and with it the scrapping of the existing statutory money laundering defence.


Solicitor fined for inappropriate text messages to client

22 April 2016

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has fined a solicitor £5,000 for misconduct after he sent inappropriate texts to a vulnerable client who was the victim of domestic abuse. In the course of its judgment, the tribunal laid down best practice for communications between solicitors and clients, including the need to avoid bad language or being patronising.


Solicitors and barristers “gearing up” for new era of CPD without the need to collect points

22 April 2016

Almost half of law firms have already moved to the new approach of ‘continuing competence’ that no longer includes collecting CPD points – nearly six months ahead of it becoming compulsory.Meanwhile, the Bar Standards Board has announced that similar CPD regime for barristers will go live in January 2017.


Software suppliers association ends agreement with Free2Convey

22 April 2016

The Legal Software Suppliers Association has ended its agreement with conveyancing portal Free2Convey, it has emerged. Free2Convey was set up by the LSSA last autumn as a rival to the Law Society’s failed conveyancing portal Veyo.


SDT strikes off another solicitor for fabricating documents

21 April 2016

A solicitor has been struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal for misconduct involving fabricating documents in order to convince a client that straightforward applications had been made when they had not. It is the latest example of a rash of solicitors facing disciplinary action for fabrications.


Financial services business adds legal advice to offering with ABS licence

21 April 2016

The Lifetime Group has become the latest financial services business to add legal advice to its offering by gaining an alternative business structure. Meanwhile, Metamorph Law – which last year announced plans to “acquire, transform and aggregate” high street law firms – has received its ABS licence.

← Older posts Page 937 of 1262 Newer posts →

Blog


Mazur: a symptom not a cause?

If Mazur is a symptom, what does it mean for the underlying health of our civil justice system: the ‘finest legal system in the world’?


Cross-generation collaboration: the key to in-house legal tech adoption

In-house legal function leaders will increasingly have to evolve their thinking on how to manage multigenerational teams containing differing levels of technological expertise.


AI and law firm risk – the view of professional indemnity insurers

In considering law firm applications for cover, many insurers will expect to see evidence of how firms are adapting to AI and preparing for the future.


Loading animation