‘Priti Patel and Grant Shapps are seeking a court injunction to stop environmental protesters from targeting major motorways after five days of tailbacks and damaging headlines for the government.’
Full Story
The Guardian, 21st September 2021
Source: www.theguardian.com
‘Employees will have the right to request flexible working from the moment they start a job, with companies obliged to explain their reasons if it is then refused, the government will propose in a consultation document this week.’
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The Guardian, 20th September 2021
Source: www.theguardian.com
‘A man who strangled a woman in a random attack after she left a supermarket has been convicted of attempted murder.’
Full Story
BBC News, 20th September 2021
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘A warrant is out for the arrest of a butcher after prosecutors at Barking and Dagenham Council secured a conviction over the attempted sale of poor-quality chicken to customers.’
Full Story
Local Government Lawyer, 20th September 2021
Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk
‘Two victims of the Windrush scandal have launched legal proceedings against the Home Office over protracted delays in issuing compensation, asking for clarity on how claims can be expedited.’
Full Story
The Guardian, 21st September 2021
Source: www.theguardian.com
‘A solicitor who received a suspended prison sentence for dangerous driving after hitting a telegraph pole as well as multiple parked cars has been fined by the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT).’
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Legal Futures, 21st September 2021
Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk
‘An anaesthetist has been given a 14-and-a-half year jail sentence for injecting his partner with drugs during a series of exorcism ceremonies that left her close to death.’
Full Story
The Guardian, 20th September 2021
Source: www.theguardian.com
Third Six Recruitment 2021
Henderson Chambers is inviting applications for a Third Six to start in Autumn 2021.
Our Third Sixers have 2 seats of 3 months each and will usually be considered for tenancy towards the end of this period. In normal circumstances pupils are expected to go to Court regularly on their own account.
Chambers provides a grant of £28,000 and guaranteed earnings of £7,000.
For more information about Chambers see our website and follow our Twitter feeds @HendersonPupils and @Henderson_Bar.
To apply send a covering letter, CV, references from at least two past supervisors, and a summary of work undertaken so far to pupillages@hendersonchambers.co.uk .
Applications will be considered on a rolling basis but should reach us by 5.00pm on Monday 20th December 2021.
Interviews will be conducted remotely by Zoom video call.
Chambers is a signatory to the Bar Council’s Third Six Pupillage Good Practice Guidelines.
‘Personal mitigation needs to be treated with “caution” in the context of sexual misconduct, discrimination and harassment, draft new guidance on disciplining barristers warns.’
Full Story
Legal Futures, 10th September 2021
Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk
‘A few days ago it was highlighted in the press that the Association of Independent Meat Suppliers was in discussions with the Ministry of Justice. The aim of these was to explore how prisoners could be used to cover labour shortages, one of the many reported effects of Brexit. The scheme under which this could be done is the “Release under Temporary License”, which permits certain categories of prisoners who are on day release to work. Another group of prisoners who could work in this context are those with long sentences that are coming towards the end of these and who are idle for years while in prison.’
Full Story
UK Labour Law, 8th September 2021
Source: uklabourlawblog.com
‘A man who kidnapped a woman from a bus stop and dragged her into nearby bushes has been jailed for life.’
Full Story
BBC News, 9th September 2021
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘The number of judicial review applications received in the first half of 2021 was – at 1,200 – down 16% on the same period in 2020, government data has revealed.’
Full Story
Local Government Lawyer, 8th September 2021
Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk
‘The UK’s “pioneering” climate laws have been more effective than legislative efforts elsewhere in the world – but are still failing to reduce emissions by an adequate amount, a campaigning legal group reports today.’
Full Story
Law Society's Gazette, 7th September 2021
Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk
‘Remote GP appointments may have been a contributing factor in the deaths of five people who did not see their doctor face to face, a coroner has concluded.’
Full Story
Daily Telegraph, 10th September 2021
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
‘The inquiry into the Post Office Horizon scandal has been urged to put more focus on the role of lawyers in perpetuating the organisation’s intransigence over the IT system’s problems.’
Full Story
Legal Futures, 10th September 2021
Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk
‘The attorney general’s office is considering whether to appeal against the jail term of four years and eight months handed to a man who choked his lover to death during sex.’
Full Story
The Guardian, 8th September 2021
Source: www.theguardian.com
‘The defence barrister for Sally Challen, who was the first woman to have her murder conviction quashed under coercive control laws, is to lead a review into domestic homicide laws.’
Full Story
BBC News, 9th September 2021
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘In 2009, Vernon Bogdanor wrote about The New British Constitution. His thesis was that a decade of New Labour reforms had produced a shift in the nature of the constitution, from one based on parliamentary sovereignty, to one based on the “sovereignty of the constitution”. Since 2009, further constitutional reforms have been implemented by governments of various political stripes, apparently consolidating the legalisation of the constitution, and the dispersal of power from the institutions of central government to Parliament, the devolved institutions, and the courts. The New British Constitution appeared to be firmly established. Recent events, however, demonstrate the shaky foundations of this new constitutionalism, with a growing trend towards a weakening of both legal and political checks on Governmental power. This blog post draws attention to this worrying trend, focusing on three key examples. It is based on the findings of the first report of the Constitutional Monitoring Group (of which the authors are both members), established to provide a biannual barometer of the state of constitutional principles in the UK. The report raises concerns not just about the potential consequences of this trend, but of the piecemeal and rapid manner in which it is occurring, with some important constitutional changes appearing to happen under the radar.’
Full Story
UK Constitutional Law Association, 8th September 2021
Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org
‘Members of the so-called “Cardiff Five” should be “recognised as victims”, a senior police officer has said.’
Full Story
BBC News, 9th September 2021
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘It is not uncommon to hear the phrase “parental alienation” in family courts in England and Wales. It is a term used to describe all manner of sins, ranging from minor parenting disputes to broad, unmitigated emotional and psychological harm to children. There has been much, and continues to be much, use of the phrase in discussions around the various issues facing the family courts and the appropriateness of the judicial remedies available to counteract it.’
Full Story
Transparency Project, 7th September 2021
Source: www.transparencyproject.org.uk