Solicitors
SDT strikes off solicitor who left “trail of destruction” behind her
The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has struck off a solicitor after she was convicted on four counts of providing immigration advice or immigration services while suspended from practice. The judge at Luton Magistrates’ Court had described “a trail of destruction towards vulnerable people she left in her wake”.
Rebuke for solicitor who acted for clients when they could not afford his firm
An associate who acted for clients in his own time because they could not afford the fees of the firm he worked at has been rebuked by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. He charged the clients lower fees but was not authorised or insured to act.
Solicitor who “completely failed to carry out money laundering checks” is suspended
A former sole practitioner who “completely failed to carry out money laundering checks or prevent his client bank accounts from being misused”, and as a result saw hundreds of thousands of pounds pass through his firm, has been suspended by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT).
PI cold-calling ban will stay in place, says SRA, as Law Society steps up attack on Handbook rewrite
Fears that the rewritten SRA Handbook might not continue the ban on law firms cold-calling potential personal injury clients have been allayed by the regulator. Meanwhile, the Law Society has released an opinion poll showing public opposition to the SRA’s plan to allow solicitors to practise from unregulated businesses.
Law Society rejects ABI claim that solicitors facilitate insurance fraud amid concern that cold-calling ban could go
The Law Society has hit back at the Association of British Insurers for claiming that solicitors are involved in insurance fraud. Separately, APIL has expressed concern that the rule which bans solicitors from cold-calling members of the public could be dropped as part of the SRA’s Handbook review.
Firm admits misconduct after involvement in SDLT avoidance schemes
A well-known Gloucestershire law firm has accepted that it did not act in the best interests of lender clients due to its involvement in stamp duty land tax avoidance schemes. In addition to its conveyancing charges – which totalled £102,000 for 65 transactions – the firm billed £28,000 for facilitating the schemes.
Tribunal decides against striking off solicitor who backdated court document
A solicitor has escaped being struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal after admitting dishonestly altering the date on a witness statement to make it look like it met a court-ordered deadline. The tribunal held there were exceptional circumstances that meant striking-off would be disproportionate.
Good news for solicitors as interventions and claims on compensation fund fall
Claims on the Solicitors Compensation Fund and the number of interventions into law firms are both falling as the impact of the recession finally begins to fade, and so it is now deliberately running at a deficit to reduce the level of reserves, it was reported yesterday.
Brexit should not affect our reforms but there are other areas of concern, says SRA
The uncertainty that has followed the vote for Britain’s exit from the European Union should not slow down reforms in the legal services market, Paul Philip, the Solicitors Regulation Authority’s chief executive, has warned.
Suspended sentence for solicitor who defrauded HMRC
A solicitor who fraudulently claimed £37,000 in income tax repayments has been handed a suspended prison sentence and told she was “wholly unsuitable to be a solicitor”. She over-claimed tax repayments. She did this by inflating expenses, including staff costs and refunds relating to clients’ divorce fees.












