Regulation


Solicitor admits breaking professional rules to help get murderer convicted

12 January 2016

A former partner in a criminal law firm has described how he deliberately broke professional rules to get a murderer convicted. Steve Chittenden said: “The dilemma is between the rules and natural justice.”


SDT questions prosecution of solicitor with “almost 50 years of exemplary service”

11 January 2016

The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has voiced “serious doubts” over whether a solicitor, aged 79 and “with almost 50 years of exemplary service”, should have been referred to it for prosecution. Reginald Hemmings told the tribunal he found the experience “extremely distressing”.


SRA asks: Are solicitors to blame for declining criminal advocacy standards?

8 January 2016

The Solicitors Regulation Authority is to research this year whether standards of criminal advocacy are declining and whether solicitors are to blame. As part of the research, the SRA said it would ask judges whether solicitor-advocates were “working beyond their level of competence”.


Barristers who work for free could be breaching referral fee ban, Bar Council warns

7 January 2016

Criminal barristers who agree to work for law firms “for no fee” could be breaching the referral fee ban, the Bar Council has warned. The Bar Council said law firms were “wrong to suggest no fee is available” where counsel was “unassigned”.


Leigh Day accuses SRA of premature referral to tribunal over Iraq abuse inquiry

6 January 2016

London law firm Leigh Day has come out fighting after it emerged that the Solicitors Regulation Authority has referred it to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal over its conduct in representing hundreds of Iraqis who claimed that they had been abused or unlawfully detained by British forces during the Iraq war.


SDT: Millions of pounds not repaid as Barnett tried to keep firm afloat

4 January 2016

Southport law firm Barnetts was a business in “dire straits” and other solicitors “would feel ashamed” at the actions of its senior partner in trying to keep it afloat, which included misusing and not repaying a £4.86m loan, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has ruled.


Barrister who claimed to have “same freedoms” as solicitor loses appeal against suspension

24 December 2015

A barrister who told a direct access client he had “all the same freedoms” as a solicitor to conduct litigation, when he did not, has lost a High Court appeal against his three-month suspension. Garnham J described Oliver White’s misconduct as “serious”.


Court of Appeal: judges working as barristers do not have to disclose “every ongoing piece of litigation”

23 December 2015

Appeal judges have ruled that part-time judges who are working as barristers do not have to reveal details of “every ongoing piece of litigation” they are dealing with to ward off accusations of bias.


BSB sticks to its guns on limited ABS licensing

22 December 2015

The Bar Standards Board has rejected suggestions that its application to become an alternative business structure licensing authority will unnecessarily restrict the extent of non-lawyer ownership and so have a detrimental effect on competition.


Jailed solicitor who stole from estates struck off for “disgraceful” behaviour

21 December 2015

Simon Armitage, a sole practitioner jailed for four years in October for fraud, has been struck off in his absence by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. Although the solicitor had wished to come off the roll voluntarily, it was “in the public interest” for his misconduct to be “aired before the tribunal”.

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