Solicitors
SDT has mercy on “immature” solicitor who lied about law degree to secure job interview
A solicitor who described her behaviour as “immature, foolish and wrong” in lying to a potential employer has been suspended by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. She upgraded her law degree from 2:2 to 2:1 in order to get an interview with the Army Legal Services.
Solicitor agrees to leave profession over rule breaches
A solicitor who was unaware of what he should do after he failed to secure professional indemnity insurance has agreed to remove himself from the profession. Despite similar cases having gone to the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal of late, he reached a regulatory settlement agreement with the SRA.
High Court: Wrong to assume it is “more improbable” that professionals will be dishonest
It would be wrong to assume that it is “inherently more improbable” that a professional person will be dishonest than anyone else, the High Court has said. In his ruling, HHJ Saffman said the sole practitioner involved had misrepresented “the true position” in an attendance note.
Judges should be able to decline ‘unfair’ QASA evaluations, SRA says
Judges should be able to opt out of assessing advocates under the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates if they believe it would be unfair, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said. Despite a Supreme Court ruling in its favour last year, QASA is still to get off the ground.
Solicitor who made “conscious choice to prop up her practice with client funds” is struck off
A sole practitioner who made a “conscious choice to prop up her practice with client funds” has been struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. Harvinder McKibbin told the tribunal that “as a true sole practitioner, matters had become a bit too much being on my own with no support”.
Temperature rises as Law Society and SRA row over regulator’s independence
An extraordinary war of words between the Law Society and Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) stepped up yesterday after the regulator was accused of “seemingly seeking to undermine” Chancery Lane. The society said comments by the SRA’s leadership this week were “perhaps… an indication of the lack of value our regulator places on our profession”.
SDT fines London solicitors who did not realise they needed to close down their firm
Three solicitors from East London have been fined by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal for failing to secure or check that indemnity insurance was in place for their firm, and continuing to accept new clients when they should have been closing it down.
Philip: Law Society’s £35m share of PC fee should be repaid to solicitors
The Law Society’s share of the Practising Certificate fee should be repaid to solicitors if the Solicitors Regulation Authority becomes fully independent, the regulator’s chief executive has said. Paul Philip said the society’s share was around £35m or £250 for each solicitor.
Claimant and defendant groups clash over Insurance Fraud Taskforce report – but the SRA is happy
Claimant and defendant personal injury interests have clashed over this week’s report of the government-commissioned Insurance Fraud Taskforce – while the Solicitors Regulation Authority has welcomed the call for its fining powers to be increased and the burden of proof before the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal lowered.
Major insurance fraud report: Increase SRA fining powers, lower tribunal burden of proof
The government should consider strengthening the fining powers of the Solicitors Regulation Authority and lowering the burden of proof in cases that reach the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal as part of the reforms needed to combat insurance fraud, a major report has recommended.












