Regulation
Solicitors accuse police support company of acting as law firm
The Solicitors Regulation Authority is investigating allegations made by a south-west law firm that a company employed by a large number of police forces to assist with road traffic prosecutions has been carrying out reserved activities without authorisation.
Policeman jailed for selling crash data to claims firm – which were sold on to law firms
Two married constables working for Lancashire Police were sentenced last month for stealing police data about car crashes and selling it to claims firms for £363,000. An investigation was launched after people complained they were getting calls from law firms when they had not given their details to anyone other than the police.
Tribunal orders law firm to disclose advice after finding client waived privilege in appeal papers
A law firm has been ordered to reveal to the tax man aspects of the advice it gave to a client after a tribunal found that the client had waived privilege in its grounds to bring an appeal out of time. However, to ensure that advice irrelevant to the issue at hand was not disclosed, the tribunal said it would review all redactions considered appropriate by the firm.
Bar recognises wellbeing pioneers as CBA warns of “crisis” among criminal barristers
The Bar Council has issued its first series of certificates to recognise efforts made to support the wellbeing of barristers, clerks and chambers’ staff. The move came as the Criminal Bar Association – itself one of the 31 chambers, inns and specialist Bar associations to receive a certificate – warned of a “crisis” in the wellbeing of its members.
Langdon sounds warning bell over “shrinking” junior Bar
While the Bar continues to increase in size, the junior Bar is shrinking, in part because of competition from solicitors, the profession’s leader has warned. Bar Council chairman Andrew Langdon QC highlighted wellbeing and diversity as two further challenges to a Bar that he said was otherwise changing with the times and following the market.
Lawyers aim to “intimidate” clients who complain, says report
Some clients worry about being “bamboozled by legal jargon” if they complain to their lawyers, a fear that can be borne out by responses that are “seeming calculated to ‘overwhelm’ or ‘intimidate’ the customer”, according to new research.
Technology will put one in five legal jobs at risk, Law Society predicts
Legal jobs are already being lost to technology, with the figure climbing to tens of thousands over the next two decades as automation and the use of artificial intelligence (AI) take hold, according to the Law Society. In the shorter term, the society also predicted that growth in the turnover of law firmswould be modest, with little or no ‘Brexit dividend’.
From rewriting clients’ wills to drunk driving – SRA wields disciplinary powers over errant lawyers
A chartered legal executive who amended clients’ wills for her own benefit and a drink-driving solicitor are among those whose misconduct has been handled internally by the Solicitors Regulation Authority in recent weeks, rather than referring them to a disciplinary tribunal.
Economic crime chief puts solicitors in the dock over money laundering
A director of the National Crime Agency has told solicitors that the legal profession is worse than any other financial services sector in reporting money laundering suspicions. Donald Toon said solicitors were “absolutely at the front line of the detection mechanism for money laundering” but “something is not working effectively”.
Only 6% of consumers can find prices on lawyers’ websites – panel turns up heat on transparency
The Legal Services Consumer Panel today ratcheted up the pressure on regulators to impose transparency requirements on lawyers with survey findings that only 6% of consumers could find prices on their websites. The panel’s annual tracker survey described a sector “which is slow to respond to consumer need”.












