Virtual courts deliver quick and efficient justice – Ministry of Justice

Posted July 30th, 2009 in courts, live link evidence, news by sally

“The new virtual court pilot in Lewisham Police Station was formally opened today by Justice Ministers Bridget Prentice and Claire Ward.”

Full story

Ministry of Justice, 30th July 2009

Source: www.justice.gov.uk

Change of tactics demanded over drugs – The Independent

Posted July 30th, 2009 in drug offences, news, police by sally

“The battle against drugs is not winnable in the near future, a survey of police and other law enforcement agents showed today.”

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The Independent, 30th July 2009

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Trade libel lawsuits soar – OUT-LAW.com

Posted July 30th, 2009 in defamation, news by sally

“The number of defamation cases brought by businesses has trebled in the past year, according to a legal publisher. The number of defamation cases overall increased by a third in the same period.”

Full story

OUT-LAW.com, 30th July 2009

Source: www.out-law.com

The stress of being a female lawyer – The Times

Posted July 30th, 2009 in news by sally

“As a verdict of suicide is recorded on a top woman City lawyer, a female in the profession reveals the intense burdens.”

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The Times, 30th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Binyam claims ‘risk to UK lives’ – BBC News

Posted July 30th, 2009 in disclosure, news, torture by sally

“British lives could be endangered if allegations of torture of a former Guantanamo Bay inmate are published, the High Court has been told.”

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BBC News, 29th July 2009

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Decision day for assisted suicide law – The Guardian

Posted July 30th, 2009 in assisted suicide, human rights, news by sally

“A groundbreaking change in the law on assisted suicides could become inevitable tomorrow when the UK’s highest court delivers its judgment in the case of Debbie Purdy, whose long legal fight has put her at the centre of the controversy.”

Full story

The Guardian, 29th July 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Asian man who called policemen ‘white redneck hooligans’ is guilty of racism – Daily Telegraph

Posted July 30th, 2009 in news, racism by sally

“An Asian man who called police officers ‘white redneck hooligans’ has been found guilty of making racist remarks.”

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Daily Telegraph, 29th July 2009

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

How virtual lawyers are weathering the recession – The Times

Posted July 30th, 2009 in news by sally

“Some do it for childcare. Others do it to pursue non-legal interests such as oil painting. One even combines it with presenting the weather on Sky News. But all represent a growing trend of solicitors embracing the freelance life.”

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The Times, 30th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Iraq war inquiry to be launched – BBC News

Posted July 30th, 2009 in inquiries, Iraq, news by sally

“Opposition parties are set to press for the Iraq war inquiry to be held largely in public when the long-awaited probe is officially launched later.”

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BBC News, 30th July 2009

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Son convicted of plot to kill over-protective parents – Daily Telegraph

Posted July 30th, 2009 in attempted murder, attempts, conspiracy, murder, news by sally

“Christopher Monks has been convicted of plotting to kill his adoptive parents with a friend he met on the internet, because he thought they were over-protective and treated him like a child.”

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Daily Telegraph, 30th July 2009

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Farewell to the law lords – The Times

Posted July 30th, 2009 in news by sally

“Today the law lords sit to give judgment for the last time in the House of Lords and, as Lord Hope of Craighead said there last week, the upper chamber will be ‘losing part of itself’. From October the law lords will become Justices of the Supreme Court, created under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005. As the law lords give judgments for the last time, we should celebrate the institution whose life is coming to an end.”

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The Times, 30th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk</a'

Paedophile who worked for Save the Children jailed – The Guardian

Posted July 30th, 2009 in news by sally

“Save the Children is carrying out an inquiry into the safeguards in place on hiring its staff after an employee who led a double life as a ‘predatory and devious’ paedophile was jailed for four years.”

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The Guardian, 29th July 2009

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

‘Toxic soup’ children win case – The Independent

“A group who blame their disabilities on their mothers’ exposure to toxic materials before their birth won a legal action today against a council it blames for their condition.”

Full story

The Independent, 29th July 2009

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Broads Authority Act 2009

Posted July 29th, 2009 in legislation by sally

Broads Authority Act 2009 published

Full text of Act

Source: www.opsi.gov.uk

Regina (G) v Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust; Regina (N) v Secretary of State for Health – WLR Daily

Posted July 29th, 2009 in hospitals, human rights, law reports, smoking by sally

Regina (G) v Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust; Regina (N) v Secretary of State for Health [2009] EWCA Civ 795; [2009] WLR (D) 260

“A policy of banning smoking in the premises of an NHS trust, which had the effect of prohibiting smoking for those detained in a high security psychiatric hospital, did not contravene the patients’ human rights and was lawful.”

WLR Daily, 28th July 2009

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Secretary of State for the Home Department v GG – WLR Daily

Posted July 29th, 2009 in control orders, law reports by sally

Secretary of State for the Home Department v GG [2009] EWCA Civ 786; [2009] WLR (D) 25

“There was no power to include in a control order a general requirement to submit to searches of the person.”

WLR Daily, 28th July 2009

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Desmond v Bower – WLR Daily

Posted July 29th, 2009 in defamation, evidence, law reports by sally

Desmond v Bower [2009] EWCA Civ 667; [2009] WLR (D) 258

“The reasoning of the judge refusing the defendant in a libel trial permission to call evidence of discreditable behaviour by the claimant subsequent to the alleged libel was a matter of law in which the appellate court was entitled to intervene. Evidence of discreditable behaviour similar to that described in the alleged libel could be admitted even though the evidence concerned behaviour subsequent to the libel.”

WLR Daily, 28th July 2009

Source: www.lawreports.co.uk

Please note once a case has been fully reported in one of the ICLR series the corresponding WLR Daily summary is removed.

Office of Fair Trading vs Foxtons Ltd – Times Law Reports

Posted July 29th, 2009 in estate agents, news, unfair contract terms by sally

Office of Fair Trading vs Foxtons Ltd

Chancery Division

“Provisions in an estate agent’s standard terms and conditions of its letting contracts with landlords relating to renewal commission, third party renewal commission and sales commission were unfair.”

The Times, 29th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Ryan v Islington London Borough Council – Times Law Reports

Posted July 29th, 2009 in law reports by sally

Ryan v Islington London Borough Council

Court of Appeal

“A tenant who wished to acquire her local authority flat under the right to buy scheme could not require the local authority to carry out remedial works to the property as a precondition to complying with a notice to complete.”

The Times, 29th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk

Boyfriend sentenced to life in jail for murder of Amy Leigh Barnes – The Times

Posted July 29th, 2009 in news by sally

“A football coach was told that he would spend at least 24 years in prison after he was found guilty yesterday of murdering his girlfriend, a model, who named her killer with her dying words.”

Full story

The Times, 29th July 2009

Source: www.timesonline.co.uk