Solicitors
Cyber criminals caused “substantial losses” to 50 law firms this year, SRA says
Cyber criminals have caused “substantial losses” to 50 law firms this year, ranging from £50,000 to £2m, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said. The regulator said a further 20 firms had fallen victim to email redirection scams.
Public takes a dimmer view of misconduct by senior solicitors than fellow professionals, research finds
Members of the public would take a stricter line on senior solicitors who err in their private lives than would solicitors themselves, research has suggested. The public would also be kinder to young lawyers, according to the findings from the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
Philip: If it’s a new law firm, it should be an ABS
There is no reason why solicitors setting up a new law firm should not do so as an alternative business structure, the chief executive of the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said. Mr Philip predicted that solicitors would in the future be ” business people first”.
Solicitor expelled from profession for lying about ‘progress’ of cases that had actually been struck out
A solicitor who deceived his firm and his clients for 13 months into thinking that he was pursuing their group employment tribunal claims, when in fact they had been struck out because of his inactivity, has been removed from the profession.
SRA shuts down 18-office legal aid firm
The Solicitors Regulation Authority has closed down the UK’s leading mental health practice, Blavo & Co, and named seven law firms to handle the outstanding case load. The regulator said it had acted because there was “reason to suspect dishonesty”.
Criminal lawyer struck off after failing to report drink-driving conviction
A criminal lawyer who failed to report a drink-driving conviction to the Solicitors Regulation Authority has been struck off by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. Gail Evans said she was aware of the need to report convictions but “panic had set in”.
SRA should not be “bargaining” with solicitors over sanctions, says tribunal
There should be no question of the Solicitors Regulation Authority “bargaining” with solicitors about sanctions, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal has made clear. The tribunal rejected a “suggested outcome” proposed by the SRA and a solicitor, and imposed harsher penalties.
Moorhead: corporate lawyers’ approach to professional ethics could be a “serious problem”
There is evidence to suggest that some of the largest law firms are making errors on the ethical approach of their corporate lawyers, while solicitors’ code of conduct is “hopelessly silent” on the problems of commercial practice, according to a leading academic.
LSB: criminal advocacy reforms “should not be designed around” any particular group of lawyers
It is important that government plans to enhance the quality of criminal defence advocacy in publicly funded cases “should not be designed around one particular professional group”, the Legal Services Board has warned. The comments can be read as coded concern that some of the proposals seem weighted in favour of barristers.
Government proposes another QASA-style regime and referral fee ban
The Ministry of Justice today laid out plans for a statutory ban on solicitors seeking referral fees from advocates in publicly funded criminal cases – even though it admitted that the evidence for the move was “largely anecdotal” – alongside another quality scheme for criminal defence advocates.












