Devon care worker who filmed sex assaults has jail term increased – BBC News

Posted October 28th, 2015 in appeals, care workers, elderly, news, sentencing, sexual offences, video recordings by sally

‘A care worker who sexually assaulted elderly patients and sent footage of the attacks to her boyfriend has had her jail term increased to 15 years.’

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BBC News, 27th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Colwyn Bay Pier ownership legal challenge fails – BBC News

Posted October 28th, 2015 in appeals, bankruptcy, health & safety, local government, news by sally

‘A businessman has failed in a high court bid to regain ownership of a derelict Colwyn Bay pier.’

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BBC News, 27th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Man challenges ‘joint enterprise’ murder conviction in supreme court – The Guardian

Posted October 27th, 2015 in appeals, joint enterprise, murder, news, Supreme Court by sally

‘A man convicted of murder under the doctrine of “joint enterprise” because he encouraged a friend to stab a former police officer is mounting a supreme court challenge.’

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The Guardian, 27th October 2015

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Duggan family to appeal over death – BBC News

Posted October 27th, 2015 in appeals, families, news, unlawful killing by sally

‘Family of Mark Duggan, whose shooting sparked England riots, win right to appeal over finding he was lawfully killed.’

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BBC News, 27th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Killer’s Supreme Court fight for anonymity – Daily Telegraph

Posted October 27th, 2015 in anonymity, appeals, mental health, murder, news, Supreme Court by sally

‘Convicted murderer who committed crimes “high up on the scale of horrific” believes he has the right to keep his identity secret from the press and public.’

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Daily Telegraph, 26th October 2015

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Court of Appeal: shipping fuel supply agreement was not ‘sale of goods’ – OUT-LAW.com

Posted October 27th, 2015 in agreements, appeals, consumer credit, news, sale of goods, ships by sally

‘A contract for the supply of marine fuel on credit was not governed by the 1979 Sale of Goods Act (SOGA), because full legal ownership of the fuel did not pass to the owners of the vessel before it was consumed, the Court of Appeal has ruled.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 26th October 2015

Source: www.out-law.com

Brian May’s request for judicial review into badger cull rejected – BBC News

‘Rock star Brian May’s quest for a judicial review into the legalities of badger culling has failed.’

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BBC News, 26th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Court of Appeal hears government surveillance law case – BBC News

‘Judges have begun hearing a government appeal against a ruling that its surveillance legislation is unlawful.’

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BBC News, 22nd October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Court of Appeal castigates judge’s conclusion on deprivation of liberty – UK Human Rights Blog

‘This was an appeal against a ruling by Mostyn J in the Court of Protection concerning a consent order between an incapacitated woman, the appellant, and the local authority ([2015] EWCOP 13). The judge had held that the 52 year old appellant, who had been severely incapacitated following surgery, had not been subject to deprivation of liberty contrary to Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights by her 24 hour care package. In his view, the test for deprivation of liberty in Cheshire West and Chester Council v P [2014] UKSC 19 did not apply. In paragraph 17 of his judgment Mostyn J remarked that it was impossible to see how the protective measures in place for KW could linguistically be characterised as a “deprivation of liberty”. Quoting from JS Mill, he said that the protected person was “merely in a state to require being taken care of by others, [and] must be protected against their own actions as well as external injury”. At para 25, he said that he found that KW was not “in any realistic way being constrained from exercising the freedom to leave, in the required sense, for the essential reason that she does not have the physical or mental ability to exercise that freedom”.’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 21st October 2015

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

Court of Appeal allows appeal in deprivation of liberty case, criticises judge – Local Government Lawyer

Posted October 22nd, 2015 in appeals, consent orders, human rights, judges, local government, news by sally

‘The Court of Appeal has allowed an appeal in a case over whether a woman was being deprived of her liberty in her own home, and in the process criticised a High Court judge who maintains that the majority decision in the Supreme Court’s Cheshire West ruling is wrong.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 21st October 2015

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

Lawyer’s crowdsourcing site aims to help people have their day in court – The Guardian

‘With warnings coming thick and fast about the stark ramifications of the government’s sweeping cuts to legal aid, it was probably inevitable that someone would come up with a new way to plug some gaps in access to justice. Enter the legal crowdfunder, CrowdJustice, an online platform where people who might not otherwise get their case heard can raise cash to pay for legal representation and court costs.’

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The Guardian, 21st October 2015

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Court of Appeal considers damages for privacy breaches – data protection to follow suit? – Panopticon

Posted October 21st, 2015 in appeals, compensation, damages, data protection, interception, media, news, privacy by sally

‘This week, the Court of Appeal is grappling with a difficult and important question: how do you value an invasion of privacy? In other words, where someone has suffered a breach of their privacy rights, how do you go about determining the compensation they should receive?’

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Panopticon, 20th October 2015

Source: www.panopticonblog.com

Simon Binner assisted death: new court battle planned over UK ban – The Guardian

Posted October 19th, 2015 in appeals, assisted suicide, news, Supreme Court by sally

‘A businessman who used LinkedIn to reveal his plan to end his life on Monday wants his death to support a new drive to change the law on assisted dying, a group supporting him has said.’

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The Guardian, 17th October 2015

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Supreme Court divorce appeals allowed: ‘fraud unravels all’ – Halsbury’s Law Exchange

Posted October 19th, 2015 in appeals, disclosure, divorce, financial provision, news, Supreme Court by sally

‘The Supreme Court has unanimously allowed two wives to have financial settlements set aside on the basis that their former husbands failed to provide full and frank disclosure.’

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Halsbury’s Law Exchange, 16th October 2015

Source: www.halsburyslawexchange.co.uk

High Court rules bridge is not a sport – BBC News

Posted October 15th, 2015 in appeals, judicial review, news, sport by sally

‘Bridge players who wanted the card game recognised as a sport have lost their High Court battle.’

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BBC News, 15th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Unauthorised solitary confinement incompatible with prisoner’s rights – UK Human Rights Blog

Posted October 15th, 2015 in appeals, human rights, news, prisons, Supreme Court by sally

‘The Supreme Court has held that the continuation of a prisoner’s solitary confinement for safety reasons was not authorised under domestic rules and incompatible with the right to private life under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights (“ECHR”).’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 15th October 2015

Source: www.ukhumanrightsblog.com

High Court judge quashes planning permission over appearance of bias – Local Government Lawyer

Posted October 15th, 2015 in appeals, bias, housing, local government, news, planning by sally

‘A High Court judge has quashed the grant of outline planning permission for a residential development in Wiltshire over the appearance of bias.’
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Local Government Lawyer, 13th October 2015

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

Double miscarriage-of-justice victim Martin Foran in payout fight – BBC News

Posted October 15th, 2015 in appeals, compensation, miscarriage of justice, news by sally

‘A terminally-ill cancer patient who was jailed for two robberies he did not commit is fighting for compensation a year after he was exonerated.’

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BBC News, 15th October 2015

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Women get right to reopen divorce settlements after supreme court ruling – The Guardian

‘Two women who said that their ex-husbands misled judges about how much they were worth win right to have settlements re-examined.’

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The Guardian, 14th October 2015

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

CA rejects law firm’s bid to reverse relief granted over funding notice failure – Litigation Futures

‘Mishcon de Reya has failed in its bid to overturn the grant of relief from sanctions made in favour of claimants who are suing the London law firm for professional negligence but failed to serve their funding notice in time.’

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Litigation Futures, 13th October 2015

Source: www.litigationfutures.com