Solicitors
Warning over “unbelievable” referral fee ban timetable that could leave firms just weeks to adapt
Law firms may have just weeks to reorganise their business plans once a decision is made on enforcing the ban on referral fees in personal injury work, a leading practitioner has warned while branding the situation “unbelievable”.
Streamlined and quicker ABS licensing process on the way
The Solicitors Regulation Authority is set to “streamline” the alternative business structure (ABS) application process, its chief executive has revealed after its approach and the time it takes were criticised at a high-profile event yesterday.
SRA warns firms and solicitors: co-operate or else
The Solicitors Regulation Authority sent out a strong message yesterday that firms which fail to co-operate with it will face tough action. It also emerged that the SRA is set to share details of the risks it considers law firms face with their COLPs and COFAs.
Susskind lays out blueprint for education and training reform
The Legal Education and Training Review (LETR) should recruit a high-powered team of young lawyers to vet its proposals and provide fresh insights into the future of the legal marketplace, Professor Richard Susskind has urged.
The legal lot of the asylum seeker: complex system, hard-to-find lawyers and “sloppy” advice
Vulnerable asylum seekers are at risk of “serious detriment” from a complex asylum process and potentially “sloppy” work by immigration advisers, according to the Legal Services Consumer Panel.
High Court throws out racial discrimination challenge to SDT ruling
The High Court has thrown out a solicitor’s challenge to the decision to suspend him, which he argued was tainted by racial discrimination. Mr Justice Haddon-Cave said that “no scintilla of discrimination of any kind is detectible”.
High Court backs SRA bid to increase suspension of solicitor to a strike-off
The High Court has struck off a solicitor who was only suspended by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal. The Solicitors Regulation Authority appealed the February 2011 decision to suspend him for three years, even though he was found him to have acted dishonestly.
Bar Council: solicitors to blame for falling criminal advocacy standards
It is solicitors, and not barristers, who are to blame for the decline in advocacy standards that has led to the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA), the Bar Council has claimed, while also strongly opposing the creation of ‘plea-only advocates’.
QASA will drive solicitors out of criminal law, Law Society warns
The Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) will drive many solicitors out of criminal law, the Law Society has warned. It is the latest hostile response to the final consultation on the scheme ahead of its introduction in January.
COLPs "need access to external legal advice" if facing conflict with firm management
Compliance officers for legal practice (COLPs) should be allowed to buy in independent external advice at their firm’s expense in the event of a conflict with management, according to two senior solicitor consultants.












