Solicitors
SRA asylum report: Positive picture marred by meritless judicial reviews
The Solicitors Regulation Authority has painted a “generally positive” picture of law firms specialising in asylum work, but uncovered serious weaknesses on referrals, fees and the handling of judicial reviews.
Review urges higher fees and mandatory training to combat “poor-quality” advice in Youth Courts
The status and quality of legal representation for children before the Youth Court need to be raised first by an increase in legal aid rates and then by mandatory training for all solicitors and barristers appearing for them, a government-commissioned review has recommended.
Solicitor sanctioned for leaving professional disbursements unpaid for five years
A solicitor who retained nearly £50,000 of client money for up to five years instead of paying professional disbursements has accepted a rebuke and fine to halt her referral to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal.
News in brief: Solicitors in hot water over dodgy investment schemes, disqualified barrister disbarred and much more
We round up news stories from the week we haven’t had room to cover, including more sanctions for solicitors caught up in dodgy investment schemes, a new chair for the Legal Services Consumer Panel, a barrister being disbarred over payments to himself, advice on price transparency, and much more.
‘Friday afternoon’ fraud cost profession at least £7m in past year, says SRA
E-mail hacks of conveyancing transactions are the most common cybercrime in the legal sector, with £7m of client losses reported in the last year, according to the Solicitors Regulation Authority. It said that three-quarters of cybercrimes reported to the SRA in the 12 months are some form of ‘Friday afternoon’ fraud.
Solicitor agrees to leave profession for three years after assault conviction
A solicitor who did not report his conviction for assault to the Solicitors Regulation Authority has agreed to remove himself from the profession for three years. According to a regulatory settlement agreement published by the SRA, he also pleaded guilty to driving a vehicle while unfit.
Axiom fund claims victim number six as solicitor who “misused” £3m is struck off
A Hull solicitor has become the latest to be struck off after borrowing millions from the controversial Axiom Legal Financing Fund which have not been paid back. He drew down £3.15m of a £20m facility to prop up the firm, which accountants Baker Tilly had declared to be insolvent.
Law Society of Ireland reports “tsunami” of English solicitors seeking post-Brexit protection
Some 810 solicitors from England and Wales will have been admitted in Ireland by the end of 2016 to protect their status in a post-Brexit Europe, figures from Dublin have revealed. The Law Society of Ireland said there were few signs at the moment of any of them taking out practising certificates or their firms opening offices in the country.
Male solicitor struck off for discussing how young female client could pay off bill with topless photo shoot
A male solicitor has been found guilty of discussing with a vulnerable female client a third his age that she might make good an unpaid bill with a topless photo shoot and possibly sexual activity. He was also found to have watched pornography in his office with her.
SRA tells MPs: Regulatory reform needed to mitigate impact of Brexit
The Solicitors Regulation Authority has spelt out to MPs the many risks of Brexit to the legal market – to clients, solicitors, law firms, foreign lawyers, the UK as a legal centre and the cause of liberalisation generally. The regulator said this strengthened the case for regulatory reform.












