Barristers


New figures highlight difficulties of finding pupillage as diversity of Bar students increases

2 December 2015

The number of students on the Bar Professional Training Course from Asian backgrounds has increased to the point where it almost equals the number of white students, new figures have revealed. The figures have also highlighted the tiny number of students with lower second degrees who secure a pupillage.


Profession set on collision course with government over independent regulation

1 December 2015

The government should return regulation to the legal profession’s representative bodies, rather than introduce full separation, the Law Society has said in response to yesterday’s surprise announcement from the Treasury that separation is now on the cards. The move is set to open up the fault lines in the current regulatory set-up created by the 2007 Legal Services Act.


LSB joins solicitors in questioning government’s criminal advocacy plans

1 December 2015

The Legal Services Board has joined solicitors in questioning government plans to introduce additional regulation of criminal advocacy. The Bar Council supported the proposals by the Ministry of Justice.


Income plummets by 24% as BSB regulates smaller than expected number of firms

30 November 2015

The Bar Standards Board has reported that its annual income is expected to plummet by almost a quarter (24%) by the end of this financial year, with the smaller than expected number of firms or ‘entities’ that had sought its oversight contributing significantly to the shortfall.


Reprimand and fine for barrister who admitted talking to jurors after trial

25 November 2015

A barrister who admitted that he had talked to jurors at Basildon Railway Station after a trial has been reprimanded and fined £300 by a Bar disciplinary tribunal. Mohammed Omar Faruk said the incident was unintentional.


Failure of QC appointment system to deliver diversity “should cast doubt on future of status”

24 November 2015

Abolishing the status of QC should now be seriously considered in the light of research that shows male Oxbridge-educated junior barristers from London-based chambers are still far more likely to take silk, according to a new study by the London School of Economics and Political Science.


BSB promises action after report finds “highly variable” standards of youth court advocacy

20 November 2015

The Bar Standards Board has accepted in principle all the recommendations of a hard-hitting report which found “highly variable” standards of advocacy in the youth courts. Only 52% of advocates thought they had sufficient knowledge of the youth justice system to do their job properly.


Suspension for barrister who appeared in court without practising certificate

13 November 2015

A Bar disciplinary tribunal has suspended barrister Martin Wynne Jones for three months for representing clients in court without a practising certificate, while disciplinary action has also been taken against a barrister who falsely claimed to have a law degree, and another who made false declarations about criminal convictions.


Direct access service winning work mostly from solicitors and other barristers

12 November 2015

Clerksroom Direct, which has over 1,000 direct access barristers on its books, has said that only around only 20% of its recent cases have come directly from members of the public. Half came from law firms and the rest from barristers’ chambers.


Barristers “under pressure” to agree not to act against big clients if they want their work

11 November 2015

Barristers need to resist pressure from big clients and government departments to agree not to act against them in the future if they want instructions, the Bar Council has said. It said it would be “professionally improper” to agree to such a condition.


Insisting on a 2:1 degree for barristers “could discriminate against BAME students”

29 October 2015

Insisting on an upper second class degree for future barristers could impose a “discriminatory burden” on BAME students, who are less likely to obtain them, a leading academic has argued in response to a Bar Standards Board consultation that raises the possibility.


Diversity, cash flow, referral fees and fraud – an anatomy of the problems afflicting chambers

23 October 2015

Widespread failure to comply with diversity rules, cash-flow problems, disguised referral fees and fraud have all been revealed in a Bar Standards Board report on “high impact” chambers. Few chambers also bothered to get feedback from lay clients.


Lawyers still not cost-effective, small businesses tell biggest ever survey

22 October 2015

Only 13% of small businesses believe lawyers “provide a cost-effective means to resolve legal issues”, the biggest survey of its kind has found. The survey also found that small businesses were more likely to use accountants in solving legal problems than solicitors.


‘Vexatious’ barrister disbarred

21 October 2015

A barrister who brought 30 failed employment tribunal claims in four years, mainly against employers and recruiters for legal roles, and also the Bar Council over its pupillage rules, has been disbarred.


Barristers shunning litigation rights but recording successes with public access

21 October 2015

Barristers are shunning the chance to go into direct competition with solicitors and conduct litigation for clients in addition to their advocacy, it has emerged. Delegates at Saturday’s Bar conference also heard that while public access also remains “under the radar”, there is evidence of clients preferring the cheaper option of going direct to a barrister.

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