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Research: Two thirds of lawyers say the job has failed to live up to expectations

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After the battle to secure training contracts and pupillages, anti-climax often awaits

Silk-PenyJones-Sleeping640-340

The reality of being a solicitor or barrister isn’t as great as many students believe, according to new research.

Only a third of lawyers said that the job has lived up to their expectations, while 14% described being a member of the legal profession as a “world away” from what they had hoped.

Worse, 57% of the 800 members of the UK legal profession surveyed admitted that they wished they had chosen a different career path. Yet most felt it was too late to do something else, with only 7% having considered making a career change.

The study — by consumer website Money Magpie — also asked lawyers what attracted them to the profession. Perhaps slightly alarmingly at a time of stagnating junior solicitor pay and shrinking partnership prospects, a whopping 97% of respondents listed high salaries.

Other frequently-mentioned factors included the prospect of making a difference to society (which 49% of respondents cited), the pull of a “pressurised environment” (32%), TV legal dramas (23%) and status (21%).

It was also clear from the results how significant lawyers’ parents can be in determining their choice of career. 51% of respondents said their decision to enter the law was influenced by their parents, with almost one-in-three feeling pressurised to the point of having “no other choice”.

Commenting on the survey, Chris Stoakes, a former City lawyer and author if ‘Is Law for You?’, noted how students tend to sign up for law degrees without knowing much about what legal study involves.

“The law is a great profession but you have to know what it entails and be cut out for it,” he said. “A-level law is not a necessary pre-condition to studying law at university, so the majority of law students sign up to a three-year law degree without knowing if it’s really for them.”

Stoakes, who has done stints at Hogan Lovells and Freshfields, added that law is “less glamorous than people outside the industry generally tend to believe” and “requires long hours and resilience”.

However, Stoakes balanced that criticism with praise for the intellectually challenging nature of being a lawyer, the opportunities to “develop close relationships with colleagues and clients” and the plentiful salaries at the top firms.

Previously

Demystifying the City: 11 things that corporate lawyers do [Legal Cheek Careers]

The post Research: Two thirds of lawyers say the job has failed to live up to expectations appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Leveson’s advice to wannabe advocates: stop bleating on about the blindingly obvious

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On the eve of judging the Bar’s annual mock trial competition the President of the Queen’s Bench Division — and scourge of the tabloid press — speaks exclusively to Legal Cheek

leveson-pic

Not many judges achieve anything resembling wide public notoriety — at least not for positive reasons — but there is at least a vague chance that the competitors at the final of this year’s premier mock trial event will have heard of the man determining the winner.

Sir Brian Leveson might not be exactly a household name, but for a year from November 2011 he was probably the highest profile judge in the land.

The £5.4 million Leveson Inquiry into press ethics gripped elements of the nation with its parade of ageing matinee idols, Fleet Street reptiles and ordinary members of the public that had been on the rough end of phone hacking.

Next weekend, Leveson will lead the judging panel of the Bar National Mock Trial competition, which is run by the Citizenship Foundation. The final this year — held in Edinburgh’s Court of Session — will be conducted using Scottish law principles.

The event is something of a Britain’s Got Talent for the law, with 2,000 state secondary schoolchildren having been whittled down to a select few for the grand finale.

Sir Brian is a big buyer of the concept. A Scouser, his own route to the legal profession started at Liverpool College, before reading law at Merton College, Oxford.

Now the recently appointed President of the Queen’s Bench Division, Sir Brian is no longer a Lord Justice of Appeal, but he still sits regularly on both the criminal and civil appeal benches. So the mock trial finalists can rest assured his judging eye is still sharp.

“The benefits of participating in the mock trial competition for school children who are not yet even studying the law is to my mind very clear,” Sir Brian told Legal Cheek in an exclusive interview in between genning up on the finer points of tartan law.

Indeed, his chat with The Cheek was the first he has given to any media outlet since reporting on the first part of his inquiry in November 2012.

“The development of analytical skill,” Sir Brian continues, “the ability to ask questions, to elicit or to challenge evidence, an ability to argue from facts to conclusions, are tremendously valuable for all to develop, regardless of whether a student ultimately goes into professional advocacy, or even the law.

“Those still at school can obtain great value from developing those skills, whether they are going to study the arts, history, science, anything that requires the asking of questions and analytical skills.”

Another advantage of the competition, according to Sir Brian, is that it gives schoolchildren raised on a diet of television courtroom dramas, a better feel for real judicial processes.

“I’m not criticising dramatic presentations of trials,” he emphasises. “There are some wonderful examples where great effort has been made at accuracy. But watching on television is very different from going to the Crown Court and seeing it in real life.

“The mock trial exercise is better in replicating real life. But even that is not perfect. These trials will be over in an hour or so and they are deliberately written to provide each side with arguments to deploy. But they have little of the complexity of what happens in court.”

Sir Brian plays with a straight bat regarding controversial legal issues of the day, so Ministry of Justice apparatchiks that have got this far will have nothing to fear from reading further. He steadfastly refuses to comment on the press inquiry or an issue of direct relevance to the legal profession — the proposed quality assurance scheme for advocates.

The judge sat on the judicial review challenge to the plan, ruling the legal profession regulators had cooked up the system lawfully — a decision that is currently being appealed.

But he is willing to advise law students on the core elements of good advocacy. The basic principle to remember, says Sir Brian, is hard work.

“You’ve got to know the brief, and work out what the other person’s brief says, and be prepared to deal with it. There’s no way of hiding if you haven’t done the work.”

It is crucial that advocates have a firm understanding of not just the issues they have to prove, but also the points on the other side that they must undermine.

“What is the weakness of the opposing case and the strength of yours?” he asks rhetorically. “And you have to be able to argue from the facts to the conclusion. But that doesn’t just mean hammering your good points. You’ve got to help the fact-finder deal with your bad points — you’ve got to provide the fact-finder with a reason to explain why the difficulties in your case don’t matter. You have to be able to dissuade the court from accepting what the other side is going to say.”

Sir Brian is also helpfully succinct on the subject of advocacy characteristics that irate the bench. “Repetition of the blindingly obvious and a lack of preparation,” are two traits guaranteed to put advocates on the fast track to finishing second in his court.

For a someone as adamant as Sir Brian that the modern judiciary gets an unfair rap for being out of touch with modern society, he exhibits a woeful lack of knowledge of contemporary daytime television fads — even those with a core legal profession element.

Joining Sir Brian in Edinburgh for the mock trail finals this weekend will be the soar away star of ITV’s lunchtime slot, Robert Rinder. The 2 Hare Court criminal barrister has become something of a sensation as the UK’s version of America’s Judge Judy — but that’s news to the Queen’s Bench Division chief.

“I don’t get to watch much daytime television,” Sir Brian wryly informs Legal Cheek.

Undoubtedly, Judge Rinder will give him a full briefing on the train journey to the Scottish capital.

Previously

Lord Justice Leveson to brush up on Scots law as he heads north with Judge Rinder [Legal Cheek]

The post Leveson’s advice to wannabe advocates: stop bleating on about the blindingly obvious appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Wig for sale on the cheap: one witchdoctor former owner

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Freshly-called lawyers could save a few quid by picking up second hand horsehair that a bogus witchdoctor is flogging after £1 million swindling spree

WitchDoctor

A Crown Court judge has forced a purported witchdoctor to flog a barrister’s wig to compensate victims for a string of frauds valued at more than £1 million.

Apart from providing scores of victims with some solace, the order — made at London’s Southwark Crown Court by Judge Ian Karsten QC — will cheer one lucky junior barrister, who won’t have to shell out for an expensive new horsehair.

The wig is expected to fetch up to £250 — still markedly less than the £500-plus demanded by purveyors of the brand new variety.

According to Court News UK, 60-year-old Juliette D’Souza ran a nice line in convincing vulnerable punters she was a witchdoctor, who could cure all sorts of ailments, provided they got their chequebooks out.

As part of the operation, D’Souza apparently made bizarre shrines in her home to fool her victims — one of which incorporated a brand new barrister’s wig.

At her original trial down the river at Blackfriars Crown Court, a jury heard that D’Souza promised gullible victims that a duo of friendly shamans called Pa and Oma would hang their donated money from a “magical tree” deep in the Amazonian rainforest. Presumably, they then were meant to do a little jig and all prayers would be answered.

In reality, the money was going straight under D’Souza’s bed. And there appears to be a lot of mugs out there. She is reported to have splurged £1.5 million on flights, antique furniture, designer handbags and rent on several north London flats.

At the Southwark confiscation hearing, Judge Karsten instructed D’Souza — who is now serving a 10-year jail sentence — to pay back £133,878.85, which Court News UK points out is “a fraction of the millions of pounds she is thought to have made in her criminal career”.

In a bid to salve some of the victims’ financial pain, the judge ordered the bogus witchdoctor to flog an antique jewellery collection and her car — as well as the wig.

The post Wig for sale on the cheap: one witchdoctor former owner appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Striking again — court defeat over legal aid cuts could see barristers back on picket line

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Judges back government plans for massive cuts in number of legal aid law firms, reigniting fears that law students wanting a career in crime … will have to rob banks

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The prospect looms again of barristers donning donkey jackets and warming hands over braziers in the shadow of the Houses of Parliament — as the Court of Appeal this morning shot down a judicial review of government plans to slash legal aid contracts for law firms.

In the aftermath of this morning’s ruling, the Criminal Bar Association (CBA) announced it would immediately consult its members on future potential action.

But striking and marching could well not be enough to convince law students and recently qualified lawyers that anything resembling healthy career prospects exists in the legal aid field.

Indeed, the issue of whether in five years’ time there will even be enough lawyers at the criminal bar to form a meaningful picket line is becoming ever more relevant.

However, for the time being, lawyers appear motivated to fight through the tactic of more public protests — arguably because they are running out of options fast.

“Firms are already merging or going out of business,” pointed out Catherine Baksi, a journalist and prominent Twitter commentator specialising in the legal aid sector, adding:

“Most of those that don’t get one of the 527 police station contracts won’t be able to survive on own-client work alone for long.”

Baksi forecast to Legal Cheek today that “if the scheme goes ahead, the result will be the formation of cartels that will ultimately put power into the hands of the remaining giant suppliers. The model will be a disaster for the bar as well. Barristers will see instructions diminish as solicitors’ firms — seeking to profit from economies of scale — hold on to work and give it to their own in-house advocates.”

The CBA and several criminal law specialist and legal aid solicitor groups last year staged a round of go-slows and other action. Barristers were much more eager to describe the protests as strikes, while solicitors danced round the issue, not wanting to be seen to be breaching their contractual duties to the Legal Aid Agency.

Barristers also launched a highly effective “no returns” policy in relation to briefs. And the combined result of the various protest measures nearly brought the criminal courts to a halt.

But the lawyer groups then switched tactics, launching a series of judicial reviews of the Ministry of Justice’s decision-making processes behind the legal aid reforms.

Now, in relation to this crucial reform of how many law firms will be authorised to take publicly funded criminal cases, the judicial review route appears close to exhaustion.

The CBA issued a statement earlier today saying:

“The introduction of two tier contracts, with the likely loss of over 1,000 firms, will cause irreversible damage to our criminal justice system. The wider ramifications of this damage should be a matter of concern for every sector of society. We await the decision as to whether the claimants intend to seek to petition the Supreme Court to reverse the decision of the Court of Appeal.”

Those front line claimants in this — one of several judicial reviews the government has faced in relation to its package of legal aid reforms — were the Criminal Law Solicitors Association, the London Criminal Courts Solicitors Association (LCCSA) and the Law Society of England and Wales.

Commenting on the ruling, LCCSA president Jonathan Black, said bluntly:

“We’re gutted. It’s another terrible blow for our criminal justice system and access to justice. Whilst the appeal court has found the devastating carve-up of solicitor representation is technically legal, we, and many others believe it’s immoral. We’ll do everything we can to continue the fight.”

Black, a partner at London Gray’s Inn Road firm BSB Solicitors, continued:

“We’re staring into an abyss of rough justice. The message sent by these swingeing ideological cuts and policies, coming on top of many other draconian measures, is simple. Don’t be poor, don’t be a victim of domestic abuse and don’t be accused of a crime. Because woe betide you, the state isn’t interested in providing you with the protection of the law. Ministerial assurances that legal aid will be there for anyone who needs it ring hollow.”

Whether the legal profession can remain unified in its last ditch battle with the Ministry of Justice also remains an issue.

During the last round of protests more than a year ago, the Law Society came to blows with criminal law solicitors, with the latter maintaining that Chancery Lane had run scared of offending Justice Secretary Chris Grayling. That row ended with the society’s leadership losing a vote of confidence at a Law Society special general meeting.

Then a year ago the CBA infuriated many solicitors and junior barristers by apparently cutting a deal with the ministry to postpone cuts to fees paid to advocates in Crown Court cases under the advocates graduated fee scheme.

The post Striking again — court defeat over legal aid cuts could see barristers back on picket line appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Revealed: How law schools’ websites looked at the dawn of the millennium

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Throwback Thursday: A journey back in time through the World Wide Web — law school edition

Cambridge — 1997

So bad it’s good

Cambridge

BPP — 2000

Stock image heaven

BPP

Nottingham — 1999

Bleak

Nottingham

Queen Mary — 1998

Early-phase east London hipster

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Newcastle — 1997

Spacing issues

Newcastle

Manchester — 1997

50 shades of purple

Manchester

Oxford — 1999

Looks like an unaccredited degree mill, but is actually the genuine article

Oxford

College of Law — 2001

Pre-university status

TheCollegeofLaw

Bristol — 1999

Essay-style

Bristol

King’s College — 1997

More paupers than kings

Kings

Previously:

Revealed: How big law firms’ websites looked in the 90s [Legal Cheek]

The post Revealed: How law schools’ websites looked at the dawn of the millennium appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Twitterati goes wild after Lord Wilson uses exclamation mark in Supreme Court judgment!

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Even Lord Denning didn’t go this far

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The Twittersphere is awash with outrage this afternoon after Supreme Court judge Lord Wilson used an exclamation mark in a judgment.

Jon Baines, the chairman of the National Association of Data Protection Officers, was among the first to spot the screamer in the hotly-anticipated judgment in Evans v Attorney General, sounding a “judicial exclamation mark klaxon”.

Further inspection reveals that the exclamation mark came at paragraph 168 of the lengthy Supreme Court judgment — which was released today — as part of Lord Wilson’s dissenting speech.

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The use of the judicial screamer somewhat overshadowed the content of the ruling — which gives the green light to the publication of letters written by the Prince of Wales to seven government departments between 2004 and 2005 — with many prominent legal figures taking to Twitter to express their shock.

Legal blogging heavyweight Jack of Kent (AKA lawyer and journalist David Allen Green) felt compelled to offer the Supreme Court Justice some drafting advice.

Now so enraged that he had to switch to his personal account, Green went on to suggest that not even the often-outspoken law student favourite Lord Denning would stoop so low as to use an exclamation mark.

Meanwhile, One Crown Office Row barrister Adam Wagner felt further investigation was required. Is there a precedent for exclamation marks?

But what about the fascinating legal questions arising from the Attorney General’s actions in preventing the letters — dubbed the ‘black spider memos’ — from being published?

Well, nobody seemed concerned with any of that. Instead, the focus turned to forecasts about what could be next for legal judgment punctuation. Emoticons, perhaps?

Legal Cheek would be more inclined to read them if they were.

Read the judgment in full below:

UKSC 2014 0137 Judgment

The post Twitterati goes wild after Lord Wilson uses exclamation mark in Supreme Court judgment! appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Saul Goodman-style mavericks vs straight-A golden children: who will be the advocates of the future?

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Debt-burdened wannabe litigators could yet exert influence on direction of grades-obsessed profession through new routes like the paralegal shortcut

EventLead

Up until the financial crisis some students with pretty mediocre CVs made it into the elite end of the legal profession. With pupillages and training contracts more plentiful — graduate law places have dropped by between 20-30% since 2008 — many firms and chambers tended to hire annually a handful of charismatic wildcards without the most impressive educational backgrounds.

Sometimes they thrived, other times not so much — but most would agree that the profession was richer for it, especially when it came to the quixotic field of advocacy, where a little spark can go a long way.

These days, though, in a squeezed and increasingly competitive legal market, the luxury of the Saul Goodman-style maverick trainee or pupil is rarely allowed. Even at the criminal bar — where law’s more weird and wonderful characters have traditionally found a home — the penchant for flair has dimmed as cash-strapped chambers opt for earnest grafters who have demonstrated their commitment by slogging it out for years as paralegals.

Is it over for the rough diamonds?

Mukul Chawla QC, who leads criminal set 9-12 Bell Yard, avoided answering this question directly at Legal Cheek Careers at Gray’s Inn on Tuesday evening, but his response wasn’t good news for anyone with a ‘B’ on their CV.

“We have two pupil slots a year. We had 350 applicants last year. Most are pretty good. Some are clearly outstanding,” he said.

Chawla’s fellow panellist, BPP Law School’s joint director of the Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC), James Welsh, who is also a criminal barrister at 9 Bedford Row, has an interesting theory on the matter.

“The removal of unfunded pupillages took away the opportunity for lots of sets to take on the wildcard. But I do see with the less conventional people who we feed through to the bar that chambers are pretty good at trying to give them a passage in.”

Of course, some people have it all. And for these characters with a combination of brains, charm and polish at an early age, life remains sweet. They may end up at top law firms, like Herbert Smith Freehills arbitrator Matthew Weiniger QC, who rose to silk last year as a solicitor. Or they may find a home at leading chambers, which is the route Essex Court Chambers commercial barrister Claire Blanchard QC has taken. They may even jump between both worlds, as Hardwicke commercial barrister Charles Raffin has done, beginning at the bar, before spending three years at the London office of US law firm Skadden and then subsequently moving back to the bar.

All three told students about their experiences on the Legal Cheek panel at Gray’s Inn. The bottom line: getting into law via their route is incredibly competitive, but can be done — and these days depends less on what university you went to than the grades you obtained when you got there and how you come across at interview. Blanchard, who heads her set’s pupillage committee, got her undergraduate degree from Liverpool Polytechnic and is determined to widen access to the bar.

“The present situation is largely self perpetuating,” she said. “Students who didn’t go to Oxbridge are repeatedly and wrongly advised to not apply to a set like ours. We can’t recruit you if you don’t apply.”

Weiniger’s firm, Herbert Smith Freehills, meanwhile, is currently looking to extend its reach from the 35 campuses where it is currently active as it bids to hire more widely, although continues to be stringent on academics and gauging wannabes’ suitability. Commercial awareness is key, Weiniger (pictured below) emphasised to the audience:

“The way to stand out when applying to a corporate law firm is your commercial analysis. There is barely a story in the newspaper without a financial story underneath it. From celebrity news, to politics to tax and even crime. There are financial implications and stakeholders. The really good applicants understand where the stakeholders are and where the money is moving … and can summarise this in a concise manner.”

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Raffin’s chambers, Hardwicke, also seeks to bring in candidates who have ploughed furrows outside the ordinary, hence his recruitment from Skadden and the set’s hiring of a former Evening Standard journalist among a number of non-Oxbridge recent pupils.

“Don’t be put off if you haven’t gone to one of the established institutions. If someone has got that spark and the skills, and is able to demonstrate evidence of those skills, such as through pro bono or other life experience, then they should apply,” said Raffin (pictured below).

raffin

While a handful make it into these top firms and chambers at graduate level, another group manage to stumble in via more circuitous routes. Solicitors who train at smaller firms have been known to get into much bigger ones amid an uptick in work in a particular practice area, although these days vacant positions are often filled from abroad, particularly in the highly international world of arbitration in which Weiniger has carved his niche. But these global links can work in wannabes’ favour, with Weiniger recommending that young solicitors seek out positions in the less desirable locations in global law firms’ sprawling networks as a way into plum jobs in London.

Raffin, meanwhile, spoke about how the “fantastic experience of working on the other side of the fence” in a law firm had held him in good stead for his return to the bar. And Welsh (pictured below) reflected on the potential of more obscure sets at the regional bar as a place for barristers to build a name.

“Having practised in London and outside, one difference you notice on circuit is that solicitors tend to pick solicitors rather than the sets they’re in. So it means that if you are personally very good that word will spread around circuit more rapidly than in London,” he said.

jameswelsh

Still, many graduates remain without training contracts or pupillages. And as these numbers grow — training contract numbers sunk again last year to 5,097, which is way off the 2007-08 high of 6,303, while pupillage numbers have plunged from 550 to around 400 — perhaps something more radical is called for?

Already, there are discussions about merging the Legal Practice Course (LPC) and BPTC to create fused vocational training from where all graduates would have to go on to practise as solicitors, only being eligible to become barristers at a later stage. This idea, when combined with the new “paralegal shortcut” that allows LPC graduates to qualify without doing a training contract, would at least cut the vast number of paralegals.

But the panellists on the whole weren’t enthused, with Chawla and Welsh expressing doubts about the wisdom of forcing wannabe transactional lawyers to do advocacy modules at law school, and Blanchard seeing no reason to remove the direct route to the bar.

There was even less love from the quintet of top lawyers for an idea to re-purpose the Inns of Court to their original function of providing accommodation so that they could then house law graduates rent-free to do low-paid but important legal aid advocacy work.

“I love your idealism but it won’t work,” said Chawla.

With the audience of 90 students at Gray’s Inn outnumbering the panellists 18 to one, they could of course have seized the building there and then. Just as the tens of thousands of law students, paralegals and junior lawyers could attempt to start their own movement to challenge the handful of baby boomers who run this country’s legal establishment.

But are rookie lawyers of sufficiently revolutionary character to redefine the profession? We’ll see.

The post Saul Goodman-style mavericks vs straight-A golden children: who will be the advocates of the future? appeared first on Legal Cheek.

The Judge rules: This is the end … for the criminal bar

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Wannabe criminal barristers should “celebrate” this week’s Court of Appeal ruling by spinning the classic Doors song and getting pissed to Jim Morrison’s prophetic lyrics

ThisIsTheEnd

As defining moments go, the Court of Appeal ruling earlier this week on a judicial review of government plans to streamline criminal legal aid provision was, well, pretty damn defining.

Doomsayers rightly get a bad name for generally purveying far too much doom and painting the bleakest of dark pictures. But in relation to the profound implications of Wednesday’s ruling, the doomsayers might so far actually have been understating the case.

No sooner had Lord Dyson — with Lords Justice Elias and Sales on the wings — handed down judgment, Chris Grayling’s bagmen at the Ministry of Justice geared up to send out revised tenders for law firm criminal legal aid contracts. The process was set to kick off today.

There are still two possible last-ditch battles for opponents of the scheme to fight. The Law Society — which was one of three parties bringing the judicial review — could be granted leave to take the matter to the Supreme Court. As of yesterday, Chancery Lane would only say “we are considering our options”.

Failing an appeal to the Supreme Court — or in the case of an unsuccessful appeal — there is one more hope for opponents. The existing coalition government could be out on its ear in about six weeks’ time, with the likely replacement being a minority Labour government propped by Scottish nationalists. For what it’s worth, Labour currently says it will bin the scheme.

But how high the issue will be on any Labour government agenda is a matter of considerable speculation. If implemented, it is probably a safe bet to expect that a revised and slimmed down contracting system will survive a change of government.

So back to those doomsayers — does the reformed regime signal the end of all but the highest reaches of the criminal bar? And will law students wanting to go into criminal advocacy have to get their heads round the concept of working in criminal law firm factories?

Yes. And here’s why.

On its face, Wednesday’s ruling on the lawfulness of implementing the reforms was exclusively a matter for law firms.

And it is easy to see why they are agitated. The MoJ will slash the number of law firm criminal contracts by nearly 70% — from around 1,600 down to 527. That will push swathes of firms to the wall, while many others will be taken over by the 20 or so mega-criminal practices across England and Wales.

So what, barristers could callously argue. That smaller group of firms will still need to instruct counsel.

Not so quick, m’learned friends. Scything the number of criminal legal aid solicitors’ firms is only part of Lord Chancellor Grayling’s grand scheme. He has also already hit solicitors with a 17.5% fee cut.

And even more crucial, the Dark Prince of the MoJ has also dictated that what fees remain will be paid in the first instance to those lawyers with oversight of the litigation, namely, the law firms. The firms will then be expected to sort out the grubby business of remunerating advocates.

Those law firms that survive are already the most efficient and commercially savvy. As one commentator pointed out to Legal Cheek yesterday, under this regime those remaining law firm factories will increase their economies of scale to maximise and squeeze as much profit as possible from repeat criminal clients.

That means creating in-house advocacy battalions of mini-call centre proportions. Sure, barristers will be welcome to apply for those posts, but they will be competing for jobs with the growing ranks of solicitor-advocates and legal executives. What’s more, salaries will reflect the more assembly line nature of the work.

This is why the Criminal Bar Association is gearing up to hit the picket lines again. Strike days and a “no returns” policy regarding briefs could have an impact, but barristers and solicitors will have to stand together for a sustained period. They will also have to be prepared for senior ministers — especially those with media backgrounds — to hurl all sorts of fat cat abuse at them.

But ultimately the future is not bright for the criminal bar. A dystopian image of galley slave advocates, whipped by red-braced and gold chain-bedecked law firm senior partners is not as fanciful as undoubtedly the Bar Council will claim.

Indeed, those at law school today still contemplating careers in criminal advocacy should probably prepare themselves for a working environment somewhat different from the Rumpolian idyll of fog-shrouded Inns of Court.

Think more along these lines: an open-plan office in a pre-fab low rise on an industrial estate. Name badges will probably be de rigueur, not least for the day Lord Chancellor Grayling arrives to cut the opening ribbon.

Previously:

Striking again — court defeat over legal aid cuts could see barristers back on picket line [Legal Cheek]

The post The Judge rules: This is the end … for the criminal bar appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Is this the youngest chambers pupil ever?

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1KBW silk plonks the old horsehair on baby’s head in craven bid to win cute points from Twitterati

Babyinawig

Aren’t baby pics meant to be restricted to that social media platform renowned as the depository of middle aged, middle class cyber bric-a-brac — Facebook?

Not according to James Turner QC, a family and crime law specialist at 1 King’s Bench Walk in the Temple.

The 39-year call silk took to The Twitter recently to pump out these shots of one of the youngest members of the Turner family gearing up for what appears to be a mini-pupillage.

And the thing about Twitter is that everyone in the ‘sphere feels entitled to comment.

In this case, Labour’s shadow attorney-general — Hull MP, Karl Turner — has piled in, tweeting at the silk: “Let’s hope the bar still exists when that little one decides career”. He then oddly signs off with a kiss.

Proving yet again there’s nowt so queer as t’internet.

The post Is this the youngest chambers pupil ever? appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Wirral Grammar School for Girls wins Bar National Mock Trial Final

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Liverpool sixth formers emerge victorious from field of 2,000 students in final presided over by Sir Brian Leveson

BMT

This year’s Bar National Mock Trial Competition has been won by Wirral Grammar School for Girls.

The Liverpool sixth formers beat Steiner Academy Hereford in a grand final on Saturday afternoon at Edinburgh’s Court of Session presided over by President of the Queen’s Bench Division of the High Court Sir Brian Leveson.

The glamorous head-to-head was the culmination of 18 rounds that have taken place since November. 2,000 state school-educated students have been involved in the competition — run by the Citizenship Foundation — alongside over 300 barristers and advocates and 90 judges.

18 teams from across the country reached Saturday’s final in Edinburgh, where they were whittled down over the course of the day in a series of mock trials.

The grand final saw Wirral Grammar School for Girls defending in a case about a theft at a music festival, with Steiner Academy Hereford prosecuting. In a closely fought encounter, Wirral edged it — with their delight evident as they celebrated the result (a video clip of the moment is below).

Afterwards, 2 Hare Court barrister Robert Rinder (pictured below) — famed for his daytime TV role as Judge Rinder — was on hand to award the winner’s gong. Further prizes were given for the annual ‘Court Reporter Competition’, which went to Megan Griffiths from South Downs College, and the ‘Court Artist Competition’, awarded to Lucy Short from Cronton Sixth Form. Legal Cheek editor Alex Aldridge and leading court artist Priscilla Coleman judged these categories.

rinder-bmt

Meanwhile, barristers Sarah Griffin and Niall Hunt were also honoured for their mentoring of students during the competition.

Previously

Leveson’s advice to wannabe advocates: stop bleating on about the blindingly obvious [Legal Cheek]

Lord Justice Leveson to brush up on Scots law as he heads north with Judge Rinder [Legal Cheek]

The post Wirral Grammar School for Girls wins Bar National Mock Trial Final appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Former One Direction star Zayn Malik to be fast-tracked to bar pupillage (April Fool!)

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Just days after jacking in boy band — and with no traditional qualifications — Zayn Malik has bagged a place at a magic circle chambers

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Pop sensation Zayn Malik is to be fast-tracked to a top-flight barristers’ chambers pupillage — despite not even having a university degree.

Legal Cheek can exclusively reveal that bar regulators yesterday gave the former One Direction boy-bander the green light to take a place at magic circle commercial set Essex Court Chambers.

Sources confirm that the Bar Standards Board was keen to waive the standard requirements for pupillage — a university degree, conversion and vocational courses — in a dramatic bid to demonstrate that the bar is open to social diversity.

“BSB officials are desperate for the profession to shed its elitist, Oxbridge image,” said a source close to the regulator. “Selecting someone who was keen and very much part of the contemporary zeitgeist was seen as the best way forward.”

The 22-year-old from Bradford — who was with the band from its origins on ITV’s X-Factor in 2010 until flamboyantly quitting last month — is understood to have had a longstanding interest in the legal profession.

“He was dead keen on programmes like Boston Legal and Judge John Deed when we were kids,” a school friend of Malik told Legal Cheek. “He especially liked the one where the lawyers got kitted out in wigs, because he’s always fancied dressing up and showing off.”

In an intriguing further development to this story which Legal Cheek uncovered at the time of going to press, it is understood that Malik’s chambers pupil master will be none other than former Prime Minister (and ex-barrister) Tony Blair.

Blair’s involvement is believed to have come about through his new Bar Council-backed role as “Envoy for Peace, Justice and Social Mobility at the Bar of England & Wales”, which will see him liaise with Doughty Street Chambers’ Helena Kennedy QC and other top diversity figures.

Malik’s own education pedigree consists of stints at Lower Fields Primary School and Tong High School in Bradford, where he is understood to have completed a GCSE in law. This lack of legal experience is unlikely to hold the ex-One Direction heartthrob back, an Essex Court junior barrister with a triple starred Oxbridge first told Legal Cheek:

“To be honest, you don’t need to know much about law as a top barrister,” said the rookie, speaking on condition of anonymity. “It’s just about giving the impression that you know what you are doing. The judges are in on it too — most commercial court hearings these days are pure pantomime, full of gibberish and gobbledygook that is made up on the spot. We’re confident Zayn can master this approach going forward.”

Malik’s pupillage award for the year will be £60,000. Indeed, Essex Court Chambers may be near the top end of pupillage remuneration, but the cash will pale in comparison to what Malik is used to — according Forbes magazine, One Direction coined it to the tune of $75 million (£51 million) in 2013-14.

And in another sensational move, it is understood that the Labour Party’s justice frontbench team is scheduled to announce later today that Malik will play a crucial role in one of its general election gambits.

Shadow Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor Sadiq Kahn will announce a scheme to be implemented under any future Labour government that will create a non-legally qualified apprenticeship route to the Supreme Court bench.

And Kahn is keen to slot Malik onto an early place on that scheme once he has finished his Essex Court pupillage.

“Zayn has experienced the rough and tumble of the X-Factor judging process,” said a Labour Party insider, “so we think he will already have a firm grasp of core rule of law concepts.”

Malik was unavailable for comment.

The post Former One Direction star Zayn Malik to be fast-tracked to bar pupillage (April Fool!) appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Lawyer left red-faced in Facebook advert typo

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Today’s *face palm* award goes to a US lawyer in Maryland — but, hands up, it could happen to any of us …

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US criminal defence lawyer John Turnbull III’s venture into Facebook advertising hasn’t gone well.

And before we go any further, our own mea culpa. Anyone in the writing business can make a balls up, as Legal Cheek‘s readers kindly and consistently point out to the editing team.

However, when a lawyer is diving into the murky world of online advertising, it is perhaps best to splurge a spot of cash on a proofreader — or ask a your secretary, friend, mum to cast an eye over the copy before, in this instance, pressing the publish button.

The “primary attorney” at Baltimore-based The Law Offices of John Grason Turnbull III has dropped a major social media clanger, omitting a key piece of information from his sponsored Facebook advertisement.

Of course, the Maryland city was the setting for cult television drugs and rozzers drama, The Wire, so you never know. But the actual story seems to be that the attorney — who specialises in criminal defence, personal injury, and workers’ compensation — simply failed to mention he was actually a lawyer on his social media ad. Opting instead for:

“Let Baltimore criminal John Grason Turnbull III fight to protect your rights.”

Turnbull presumably hoped the mistake would go unnoticed. But unfortunately for him, it was spotted by our friends over at US legal news website Above the Law. Still, at least the advert was noticed.

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Judges give Grayling a special birthday present — another High Court defeat

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Justice Secretary gets slapped down again, this time over prisoner transfer reforms – but happy b-day, nonetheless, Chris

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This is not an April Fools’ parody — although it might feel like a cruel joke to many lawyers.

Today is Chris Grayling’s birthday — and he had a jolly present from the High Court bench.

The boyish looking former television producer turned Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, clocked up 53 years on the day when he lost yet another court battle over further legal reforms.

This time the High Court branded as unlawful the Ministry of Justice’s recently imposed policy of excluding prisoners from being transferred from closed prisons to more lenient open conditions if they have a history of absconding.

According to the Press Association, two senior judges held that excluding transfers — save in exceptional circumstances – for those prisoners is inconsistent with the ministry’s own directions to the Parole Board.

Those long-standing directions state that “a phased release” from closed to open prison is necessary for most inmates serving indeterminate sentences “in order to test the prisoner’s readiness for release into the community”.

The ruling has triggered the usual Twitter uproar over Grayling’s suitability to retain such a high post in government, regardless of how old he is.

Asked blogger Jack of Kent:

But if experience is anything to go by, lawyer objections and outrage will make next to no impact on the first non-lawyer Lord Chancellor, who seems impervious to the opinions of those who did bother to qualify

All of which means the only hope his opponents have will be that come 8 May, Grayling’s Conservative Party will either be out of government following the general election, or he’ll be reshuffled.

Read the judgement if full below:

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The lamps went out all over legal London today

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Power cut brings chaos to lawyer-land, but several brave souls manage to get down the pub

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Lawyer implacability was superbly highlighted on Twitter this afternoon, as an electrical fire in London’s legal heartland forced the evacuation of thousands of offices workers.

This image of lawyers stoically enduring the evacuation while supping several glasses of plonk at renowned legal watering hole Daly’s Wine Bar was leading the way on the social media site.

The criminal law specialist tweeter focused on the “screaming hysteria”, clearly evidenced by the fact that the drinkers all remained on their feet.

It is thought that the offices of both the Law Society and the Bar Council were affected as neither returned calls. (However, some speculated that was simply business as usual for the two professional bodies.)

Meanwhile, the London Fire Brigade reported that crews rushed to an electrical fire among cables under the pavement on Kingsway in Holborn.

The alarm was raised after smoke was seen coming out of an inspection cover on the pavement, resulting in more than 2,000 workers being evacuated from nearby buildings owing to billowing bursts of thick black smoke.

Six fire engines and 35 fire-fighters and officers piled in to save the lawyers … and others.

The post The lamps went out all over legal London today appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Call for QC rank to be widened to all lawyers, not just advocates

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Restricting the gong is unfair and a block to diversity in the modern profession, says legal executives group

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Queen’s Counsel — the highest rank for advocates in the UK — should be more widely available across the legal profession, the body representing legal executives proposed today.

The radical move to allow all lawyers — not just those qualified to appear in the higher courts — to apply for the rank is likely to ruffle feathers at the top reaches of the bar, and potentially the Law Society.

The call could also reignite the on-going debate over the value of the title in general, with the QC award process continuing to attract criticism for being too much of an old boys’ club.

According to the Chartered Institute of Legal Executives (CILEx) — which represents 20,000 practitioners — widening the eligibility for QC “could lead to improved diversity”.

The CILEx proposals came in a response to a consultation on QC eligibility. In it, the organisation said:

“There is still too much emphasis on advocacy. In some areas of law advocacy is rare. It is the capacity to be an excellent lawyer and not only a good advocate that is essential for the role.”

CILEx chief executive Mandie Lavin continued:

“QCs are amongst the highest profile figures of the legal profession, though they are not always reflective of our diversity and make-up. Broadening the pool of candidates, whilst continuing to appoint on merit, will give the QC title greater validity and respect.”

Until 1994, the non-honorary QC rank was the exclusive preserve of barristers. But when elements of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 were implemented, qualified High Court solicitor-advocates became eligible.

The first two solicitors were appointed in 1997 and five were given the nod in the most recent round out of a total of 93 awards made.

The CILEx consultation response also highlighted the high cost becoming a silk, with successful applications setting lawyers back around £6,000. The organisation called for a review of the fees “to prevent them becoming prohibitive”.

CILEx also called for a QC re-accreditation scheme to be implemented to maintain public confidence in the ongoing value of the rank — which currently is held for life, regardless of silks’ performance levels.

The post Call for QC rank to be widened to all lawyers, not just advocates appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Yet another BPTC is being launched — despite chronic shortage of pupillages

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BPP is controversially to bring its BPTC to Brum, despite only nine pupillage places available in all the West Midlands as of yesterday

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This is just what hard-pressed pupillage-hunting barristers need at a time when the market is flooded with wannabes — yet another bar vocational course churning you yet more pupil hunters.

The Bar Standards Board — the profession’s regulator — confirmed today that it had given the nod to BPP Law School plans to offer 48 Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC) places at its Birmingham outpost.

The controversial decision falls against the backdrop of yesterday’s figures from the Pupillage Gateway showing that chambers across the entire Midlands were offering only nine pupillages.

BPP’s move will pit the school directly against old rivals the University of Law, the only other provider of the BPTC in the West Midlands powerhouse. As of 2012, the university had 88 students enrolled on its Birmingham BPTC course.

While the move may cheer BPP’s bean counters, it is likely to trigger groans of dismay across the bar itself.

The BSB’s most recent training figures are old, dating from 2011-12, but they tell a hard story. As of that date there were 438 pupillages available annually, measured against 1,732 students enrolled on BTPC courses across country.

There is much speculation over why the regulator has not released updated figures, with the more cynical suggesting the reason quite simply is that the disparity has worsened.

Indeed, there is evidence to suggest that both numbers are going the wrong way. In 2007-08, there were 562 pupillages available; and in 2010-11, there were 1,682 BPTC enrolments.

Current BSB figures, such as they are, also highlight that the biggest slice of pupillages — nearly 24.5% — is in criminal law practice, while 13% is in family. Both areas have been butchered by recent Ministry of Justice cuts to legal aid, and as a result are set to offer fewer pupillages.

In addition, the provinces aren’t exactly where wannabe barristers should be heading for pupillages. The regulator’s figures show that only 28% — just 123 places — were offered outside London.

Nonetheless, Anna Banfield, BPP’s director of BPTC programmes, was upbeat about the move:

“This will allow students to study the BPTC in Birmingham where they may live or intend to practise and make it easier for them to develop links with the local bar,” she said.

On the issue of whether the market needs more pupillage hunters, BPP’s dean and chief executive Peter Crisp added:

“By equipping our BPTC students with all the skills they need to succeed, a very high number of our graduates either secure pupillages here in the UK, or use the qualification to further their career overseas, where the BPTC is a highly valued qualification.”

For the BSB’s part, the regulator pleaded its hands were tied in relation to pupillage numbers.

“The oversight regulator, the Legal Services Board, does not allow the BSB to control the number of people enrolling on the BPTC course,” explained a spokesman.

He maintained that the board would publish updated figures on the number of pupillages available across England and Wales “in the next few months”.

The post Yet another BPTC is being launched — despite chronic shortage of pupillages appeared first on Legal Cheek.

8 top English uni law faculties dropped from Singapore bar approved institution list

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Cries of protectionism ring out as Russell Group stars are axed

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Eight leading English university law faculties are up in arms after they were removed from the Singapore bar’s list of approved institutions.

The decision to drop the law schools has been lambasted as “pure protectionism” by the faculty head at one of the jilted universities.

Paul Kohler, head of law at the School of Oriental and African Studies at London University, said the decision was disappointing but not surprising.

“It is a case of blatant protectionism on the part of the Singapore law schools,” complained Kohler.

The move by the island state’s Ministry of Justice has affected a string of other leading law schools at the universities of Exeter, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield and Southampton.

It is understood that the dropped schools last year accounted for a third of all Singaporean law graduates in the UK — some 221 from a total of 779.

Media reports from Asia suggest the rationale behind the chop was based on supply and demand. The president of the local law society, Thio Shen Yi, was quoted on the website for Channel New Asia as saying:

“As a profession, we will only hire the right numbers that we want. It is all about economics … We are not going to hire extra lawyers just because there is an extra supply. We only hire the right amount of lawyers depending on the amount of work that we have.”

However, leaders at the affected law schools are understood to be bitter over the decision.

“A lot of Singapore students come to England,” said one experienced commentator on legal education, “and this will severely damage income generation and the reputation for English law schools relative to their competitors at Australian universities.”

One source suggested that the Singaporean authorities — who toured UK institutions a year ago — were unimpressed by the results of the National Student Survey for some of the dropped universities.

In a detailed letter to the Singapore Institute of Legal Education, Kohler wrote:

“In today’s globalised economy, students and employers require an LLB to go beyond the parochial confines of English law, and the SOAS LLB is unique in providing that global component as an intrinsic part of the degree”.

Likewise, a spokesman from the University of Exeter told Legal Cheek that the “law school continues to be professionally recognised by a number of other jurisdictions and it maintains strong professional links with law alumni throughout Asia”.

Exeter was quick to point out that it had agreed with the Singapore Ministry of Law that Singaporeans and permanent residents currently studying its LLB — and those with places beginning any time this year — remain eligible for admission to the Singapore bar on graduation.

The Singapore Law Society president held out some hope that the dropped universities could be restored in time, saying:

“As Singapore expands as a legal centre, if things like the Singapore International Commercial Court takes off, and if Singapore law becomes a choice of law for this region, then the scope of Singapore legal services will expand and we will need more lawyers.

“But the reality is that it is going to be a very competitive job market for them if they all want to become lawyers; there simply aren’t enough training contracts on offer.”

Indeed, English commentators warned the dropped law schools that it was unlikely any of them would be reinstated on the Singapore approved list within five years.

Eleven English university law schools remain approved: Birmingham, Bristol, Cambridge, Durham, King’s College London, the LSE, Queen Mary and Westfield London, University College London, Nottingham, Oxford and Warwick.

The post 8 top English uni law faculties dropped from Singapore bar approved institution list appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Research shows in-house lawyers pushed to the brink of illegality

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Young lawyers might fancy the nine-to-five routine of corporate legal departments, but an ethical swamp awaits

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Corporate in-house legal departments have become increasingly attractive to younger lawyers as they appear to offer decent wedge for considerably less stress than is on the cards at the coalmines of private practice.

But research released today suggests that while billing targets can be forgotten, in-house lawyers face mounting stress elsewhere as legal departments can be ethical grey zones.

According to a group of academics, young lawyers going in-house will face a growing and unresolved ethical minefield that can have them occasionally bordering on illegality.

The “appetite for legal risk,” says the research team from law schools at University College London and Birmingham University, “involves accepting, even welcoming, tolerance for conduct which may be, or even may be likely to be, unlawful”.

Leading the project were Professor Richard Moorhead, UCL’s director of the Centre for Ethics and Law and Birmingham University law lecturer Steven Vaughan.

They maintained that in-house lawyers increasingly find their corporate responsibilities were “sometimes in tension with the professional obligation to promote the rule of law and the guidance to solicitors that they must treat the public interest in the administration of justice as definitive of conflicts between professional obligations”.

Commented Morrehead:

“Our research and some anecdotal commentary suggest that the role of general counsel is under increasing pressure. Their professional ethical boundaries are not as well drawn as may be necessary for the increasingly sophisticated world of in-house work.”

Vaughan continued:

“The more-for-less challenge and the need to be commercial and influential within a business context can pose significant ethical challenges for in-house lawyers. They and their businesses are not always well prepared for such challenges.”

Other key findings from the research showed there was no shared sense of a correct approach to legal risk at in-house departments as general counsel were not clear or confident about their approach, or the best approach, to legal risk management.

Likewise, while objectivity and independence are necessary for risk assessment to be accurate and useful to businesses, they can conflict with the pressures on in-house lawyers to be commercial team players. According to the researchers, “there are overt pressures and implicit biases at work that may sometimes undermine objectivity”.

Over the next few months, the research team will hold a series of town hall-style meetings with general counsel and other in-house lawyers around the UK. They will also conduct a round of structured interviews and an on-line survey to expand their existing findings.

The post Research shows in-house lawyers pushed to the brink of illegality appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Exclusive: There really is a barrister called Zane Malik

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One Direction April Fools’ joke comes true (sort of) as Legal Cheek unearths a young barrister in Lincoln’s Inn who could be the boy-bander of the law

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There really is a barrister called Zane Malik, as Legal Cheek’s hugely popular April Fools’ joke from last week turns out to have a toe in reality.

And the irony is the London-based lawyer also seems to fancy himself as at least the boy-bander equivalent of the Inns of Court. He’s big on social media, has his own hip website and is not averse to publishing smooth photographs of himself.

Called in 2007, Malik practises at Lincoln’s Inn chambers 12 Old Square, where he specialises in the rock ‘n’ roll fields of immigration, human rights and general public law work.

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His counterpart (and potential alter ego) — Zayn Malik — last month kissed good-bye to pop sensation band One Direction, and was briefly rumoured to be headed to a fast-tracked pupillage at a leading commercial set of barristers.

While that turned out to be a jolly wheeze, the real barrister Malik (whose Facebook fan page is pictured below) achieved notoriety three years ago when he was The Times newspaper’s lawyer of the week.

He won that accolade — the legal equivalent of taking The X Factor prize — for appearing in a landmark Supreme Court case involving a former student whose visa extension was refused. The judges ruled that because Parliament had not scrutinised the Home Office’s point-based rules, they were unlawful.

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And while Zayn has yet to pick up a university degree, Zane has just presented a PhD dissertation at King’s College London on the UK’s asylum and human rights law, focusing on claims based on sexual orientation and gender persecution.

Previously:

Former One Direction star Zayn Malik to be fast-tracked to bar pupillage (April Fool!) [Legal Cheek]

The post Exclusive: There really is a barrister called Zane Malik appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Could festival toilets law be the hot new practice area of 2015?

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From Glasto to the Isle of Wight, banks of portaloos hide a potential minefield of accidents and personal injury litigation, says England’s newest lavatory law specialist

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Music festival hazards usually involve knee-high mud, rude campers (or these days “glampers”) and blow-your-bonce-off skunk. But one lawyer is warning young and old festival-goers alike of the perils of “toilet injuries”.

“Festival toilets by nature are hazardous,” extols Tristan Hallam, a partner at national law firm Slater & Gordon, “and, in more ways than one, should be approached with caution.”

Indeed, Hallam appears to be carving out a niche as the country’s leading specialist in lavatory law at a firm hell bent on creating the first household brand name in the UK legal profession.

According to this cutting edge lawyer with his hand on the chain, anything can happen when going to the bog at a festival — and pretty much none of it is good. And what’s more when something does go wrong, festival-goers are unlikely to have a clue about what to do next.

Analysing on his law firm blog on the multiplicity of triggers for potential lavatory litigation, Hallam turned to recent history. He highlights one rock-chick at the Leeds Festival — “unfortunately dubbed Poo Girl” — who was reluctant to leave her handbag unguarded after being a victim of theft at a previous gig.

“Upon a visit to the portable toilet,” related Hallam, “her bag tragically swung from her shoulder into the toilet. Because of the important contents of her handbag, she leaned in to retrieve her bag and got her shoulders wedged and was trapped headfirst in the toilet until fire-fighters could rescue her.”

As uncomfortable an experience as that undoubtedly was for Poo Girl, at least she survived. Which, sadly, is more than can be said for a young boy who died after suffering head injuries from an exploding septic tank in a festival lavatory.

In his blog, Hallam pointed out that questions of liability can be tricky when it all goes wrong in a festival bog.

“Where there are generally numerous contractors present,” he wrote, “it is initially difficult to see who the potential defendant is.”

However, the lawyer went on to point out that “many festivals are run to such a high standard that a single contractor will be used to provide toilet facilities”. He continued:

“Of particular importance, and vital in a claim, is in obtaining as much evidence post-accident of the hazard, witness statement from friends of member of the public, photographs and even and detailed entry in an accident book are all going to be incredibly useful is establishing a claim.”

So the next time you dash to the portaloos to escape the shrill sound of yet another has-been band trying to resurrect its career, remember to have law firm contact details tucked inside the Wellies.

The post Could festival toilets law be the hot new practice area of 2015? appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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