Barristers


Bar student who failed single module loses JR over having to retake entire BPTC

8 July 2015

A mature Bar student has lost a judicial review against the Bar Standards Board after a two-time failure to pass a single module on opinion writing meant he in turn failed the Bar Professional Training Course and would have to take entire course again before moving onto pupillage.


Barrister fined £4,000 for “conduct of sexual nature” towards pupil

6 July 2015

A senior barrister has been fined £4,000 by a Bar disciplinary tribunal for conduct “of sexual nature” towards his female pupil. Meanwhile, another barrister has been rebuked after his clients were absent from court when he knew they had been told to arrive later, but did not tell the court.


Barrister finishes pupillage at personal injury solicitors

6 July 2015

In a rare move, a barrister has been allowed to finish her pupillage at a personal injury law firm. Henrietta Hughes is set to become the first in-house counsel at Cheshire and London firm Hilary Meredith Solicitors when her pupillage ends in August.


QASA is “only way” to protect the public, Supreme Court rules

24 June 2015

The Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) is finally set to go ahead after the Supreme Court ruled that it was “the only way” to protect all members of the public involved in criminal proceedings “at an upper level”. But it has been claimed that the decision will make it harder for similar schemes to be introduced for other areas of law.


Barrister faces suspension after second disciplinary tribunal over handling client money

23 June 2015

A commercial barrister who was fined by a Bar disciplinary tribunal earlier this month for handling £5,000 of client money, faces suspension after a second tribunal found that he later handled a further £400,000 from another direct access client.


Bar Council joins forces with northern barristers to launch “go-to website” for direct access

22 June 2015

The Bar Council has joined forces with the two Preston-based barristers behind the Direct Access Portal to relaunch it as the “go-to website” for consumers looking for a barrister. The portal will replace the Bar Council’s existing direct access register.


Lifting referral fee ban will give green light to “least ethical” solicitors

15 June 2015

Ending the ban on referral fees in legal aid cases risks approving the practices of some of the solicitors’ profession’s “least ethical and least professional members”, barristers have claimed.


Barrister who handled client money banned from public access work

11 June 2015

Another barrister has fallen foul of the rules on public access, this time by handling client money, leading to a six-month ban from handling such cases and a £1,000 fine for then failing to co-operate with the Legal Ombudsman and Bar Standards Board.


Lawyers urged to play it cool with litigants in person

4 June 2015

Solicitors, barristers and legal executives have been told by their professional bodies to be polite and non-judgemental when dealing with litigants in person (LiPs), and take “extra care to avoid using inflammatory words or phrases”.


Senior QC who worked with ‘named and shamed’ barrister found guilty of three misconduct offences

19 May 2015

Ian Macdonald QC, one of the country’s leading immigration lawyers, has been found guilty of three misconduct offences by a Bar disciplinary tribunal. The offences relate to Mr Macdonald’s role as joint head of Kings Court Chambers in Birmingham.

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