No privilege for litigation funding documents – Legal Futures

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Documents created to enable a litigation funder to decide whether to fund a group action are not covered by litigation privilege, the High Court has ruled.’

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Legal Futures, 30th June 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Hleb Buziuk: Downward Self-Correction: The AGNI Reference and the Mirror Principle in Reverse – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘The literature on section 2 of the Human Rights Act 1998 has largely been preoccupied with a single direction of travel: how far domestic courts may go beyond the Strasbourg case law, or against it. Those are the questions behind Ullah, behind the refusal to follow Strasbourg in Horncastle, and behind the long debate over whether there is a ‘ceiling’ on domestic rights (see L. Graham, ‘The Modern Mirror Principle’ [2021] PL 523, and the work of Roger Masterman on the domestic–Strasbourg relationship). A Reference by the Attorney General for Northern Ireland of a devolution issue under paragraph 34 of Schedule 10 to the Northern Ireland Act 1998 [2026] UKSC 16 (‘the AGNI Reference’) runs in the other direction. Sitting as a panel of seven, the Supreme Court used the 1966 Practice Statement to overrule its own decision in Surrey County Council v P; Cheshire West and Chester Council v P [2014] UKSC 19 (‘Cheshire West’), holding that the ‘acid test’ for deprivation of liberty under article 5 ECHR had never been adopted by the European Court of Human Rights and was wrong in principle. Craig Wells has read the decision through a rule-of-law lens, stressing the consequences for those who lack capacity and the risk of arbitrary power (UKCLA, 15 June 2026); I approach it from another angle, though, as I suggest at the close, the two meet. My claim is narrow. The constitutionally distinctive feature of the AGNI Reference is not simply that the Court narrowed a Convention right, or even that it overruled itself to do so. It is the reason the Court gave for making that correction itself rather than leaving the matter to Strasbourg: a public authority cannot ask the European Court of Human Rights to correct an over-protective domestic reading of the Convention. What follows traces that move: its basis in precedent, the statutory link to article 5, the Article 34 asymmetry that made domestic correction necessary, and its 2012 pedigree, before turning to why it matters.’

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UK Constitutional Law Associaton, 30th June 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

Student gets almost four years for bomb threat – BBC News

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A teenager who admitted possessing explosive substances and threatening to bomb his college and kill his fellow students has been sentenced to three years and 11 months in custody.’

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BBC News, 29th June 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Asylum seekers to pay £10,000 towards living costs under new UK law – The Guardian

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Asylum seekers will be ordered to pay about £10,000 to cover their state-funded living costs or be denied settled status in the UK under a new law to be considered by MPs on Tuesday.’

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The Guardian, 29th June 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Ex-MP Craig Williams pleads guilty over general election betting offence – BBC News

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Former Conservative MP Craig Williams has pleaded guilty to cheating at gambling by placing bets on the date of the 2024 general election.’

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BBC News, 29th June 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Partner transferred £700,000 to client “to avoid negligence claim” – Legal Futures

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A former partner in a London law firm transferred almost £700,000 of his own money to a client company to avoid a negligence claim.’

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Legal Futures, 30th June 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Stalker who used fake Tinder profile to lure men to ex’s home jailed for eight years – The Guardian

Posted June 30th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A man has been jailed for eight years after he set up a fake Tinder profile for his ex-partner and enticed multiple men to her house with the intention of raping her.’

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The Guardian, 29th June 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Former Police officer guilty of misconduct after fostering ‘toxic’ culture among colleagues on WhatsApp group – The Independent

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A former police sergeant has been found guilty of misconduct in public office after fostering a “toxic” WhatsApp culture that embroiled a dozen colleagues.’

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The Independent, 26th June 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Man jailed for assault on police officers and customer at Manchester airport – The Guardian

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A man has been sentenced to three and a half years in jail after being convicted of assaulting two female police officers and a member of the public at a Starbucks in Manchester airport.’

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The Guardian, 26th June 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Prosecutors in England and Wales expect rise in domestic abuse during World Cup – The Guardian

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Prosecutors in England and Wales are expecting incidents of domestic abuse to increase during the men’s World Cup, and have urged victims to come forward, saying those responsible “will be held accountable”.’

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The Guardian, 27th June 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Men who allegedly helped rapist drug and abuse wife named – BBC News

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘The co-accused of a rapist who allegedly conspired with other men to drug and sexually abuse his wife can be named for the first time after reporting restrictions were lifted.’

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BBC News, 26th June 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Firm fined £50,000 over worker’s fatal fall – BBC News

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A construction company has been fined £50,000 over the death of a worker who fell from scaffolding at a building site in south-west London.’

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BBC News, 28th June 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

UK state threats bill could pull British journalists into terror prosecutions – experts – The Guardian

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘British foreign correspondents could be at risk of prosecution if they use sources within state-backed groups in countries such as Iran under national security legislation being rushed through parliament this week.’

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The Guardian, 29th June 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

The Nottingham Ockenden report (2026): Key findings and implications for clinical negligence practitioners – 1 QMLR

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘On 24 June 2026, Donna Ockenden published her report into maternity and neonatal services at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH). It is the largest maternity inquiry in NHS history. The review was commissioned in June 2022 by NHS England, replacing an earlier regional review that had lost the confidence of affected families. By the time the review closed in May 2025, nearly 2,500 families had come forward, covering experiences predominantly spanning between 2012 and 2025.’

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1 QMLR. 26th June 2026

Source: 1corqmlr.com

The “Inequality of Arms” Problem: AI-Assisted Complaints and Representations – Kingsley Napley Regulatory Blog

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘One of the more immediate challenges facing regulators is not the use of AI by regulated professionals, but the increasing use of AI-generated advocacy by all participants in the regulatory process.’

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Kingsley Napley Regulatory Blog, 26th June 2026

Source: www.kingsleynapley.co.uk

‘Neighbour from hell’ slapped with restraining order for deliberately leaving lawnmower running during party – The Independent

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A 68-year-old has been slapped with a restraining order for harassing her neighbours by deliberately leaving her lanmower running while they hosted a dinner party.’

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The Independent, 29th June 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Supreme Court’s decision in ‘AGNI’ – Law Society’s Gazette

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘June has been an eventful month for mental capacity practitioners, with the Supreme Court not just distinguishing but ripping up the so-called acid test for deprivation of liberty laid down in the then landmark Cheshire West judgment of 2015 (The Attorney General for Northern Ireland’s reference (Deprivation Of Liberty) [2026] UKSC 16 (‘AGNI’)).’

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Law Society's Gazette, 26th June 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Gambling related suicides – Law Pod UK

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘A casino in your pocket 24/7. Is the Gambling Act 2005 fit for purpose?’

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Law Pod UK, 29th June 2026

Source: audioboom.com

Dimitrios Kivotidis: Economic Analysis of the British Constitution: Preliminary Thoughts – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Whether one subscribes to the notion of the ‘ancient constitution’ or not, it is not the most controversial claim to make that the British constitution is one of the most resilient in the world, originating in the constitutional events of 1688. It has certainly undergone change since then, but this has always been incremental. The processes of change and reform of the British constitution has been approached from various angles. Yet it is surprising, in the country where utilitarianism was born as a school of thought, that there has been little explicit study of the economic value of the British constitution.’

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UK Constitutional Law Association, 29th June 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

Government scraps 200-year-old law as rough sleeping no longer a crime – The Independent

Posted June 29th, 2026 in news by sally

‘Rough sleeping is set to be decriminalised next week as the government finally scraps a 200-year-old law that has long been criticised as outdated. The Vagrancy Act, originally introduced in 1824 for the punishment of “idle and disorderly persons, and rogues and vagabonds”, will be formally repealed on Monday, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government has confirmed.’

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The Independent, 28th June 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk