Solicitors
Court rejects SDT appeal by solicitor who claimed he was acting as McKenzie Friend
The Divisional Court has thrown out an appeal by a solicitor disciplined after representing a client in court when he was not allowed to – and claimed he was instead acting as a McKenzie Friend and so beyond the regulator’s reach.
Solicitor struck off for pornography conviction but continues to run unregulated firm
An eminent tax lawyer and former partner at leading London law firms has been struck off following his conviction for multiple pornography offences – but he continues to practise from an unregulated entity. He is also a former president of the Chartered Institute of Taxation.
Small firms must publish complaints data, consumer panel insists
Small law firms should not be exempt from any new requirement to publish complaints data, the Legal Services Consumer Panel has argued. It said the information should be incorporated into the beefed-up ‘digital register’ planned by the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
Top crime solicitor and former GCHQ legal head sanctioned over advice after CPS complaint
One of the country’s top white-collar crime lawyers and a former head of legal affairs of GCHQ have been fined for advising a client to remove material from their premises ahead of a police search. It was the Crown Prosecution Service that complained to the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
Solicitor reported after personal relationship with witness raises conflict concern
A solicitor acting for a father in a care case has been reported to the Solicitors Regulation Authority after it emerged she was in a personal relationship with a witness. Her Honour Judge Cameron in Medway Family Court said it was the third occasion such an instance had occurred with this solicitor.
Profession under fire after Shiner is struck off
The decision of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal yesterday to strike off human rights lawyer Phil Shiner over his conduct of abuse claims against British soldiers in Iraq has received unprecedented coverage across the media today and arguably put the entire legal profession on the back foot.
Solicitors and CMCs probed over “surge” in holiday sickness claims
Relationships between CMCs and solicitors over holiday sickness claims are under investigation, the Claims Management Regulator revealed yesterday. It comes in the wake of the ABTA claiming that CMCs have moved onto holiday sickness cases as more lucrative sources of work than whiplash.
Solicitor looking to retire duped by property fraudster posing as his saviour
A solicitor who thought he was selling his practice so that he could retire, but in fact inadvertently allowed criminals into his practice to commit property fraud, has been suspended after admitting he was naïve and had behaved like “an idiot”.
FOI request suggests few criminal law ‘touting’ reports
Eyebrows were raised yesterday after a freedom of information request on ‘touting’ by criminal defence law firms – in which agents for rival solicitors poach potential clients even if they have representation – suggested few complaints have been made to the regulator.
Fraudulent law firm trio sentenced to 14 years in jail
A solicitor, legal executive and non-lawyer consultant at a West Sussex-based law firm have been sentenced to over 14 years in prison after being found guilty of embezzling almost £700,000 of client funds over seven years. Sole principal Simon Kenny was also a deputy district judge.












