The Crime and Policing Bill: A New Age for Remote Knife Sales – 2 Hare Court

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘In the run-up to the 2024 general election, the Labour Party set out its vision for policing and criminal justice, setting itself the ambitious target of halving knife crime in a decade. The Crime and Policing Bill is the Government’s legislative follow-through on those promises. Introduced in the House of Commons on 25 February 2025, the Bill is comprehensive and wide-ranging. Among its most significant provisions are those in Part 2 aimed at tightening the regulation of remote knife sales.’

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2 Hare Court, 11th June 2025

Source: www.2harecourt.com

Purbeck House: remediation order made against Leaseholder on Application by Freeholder – Falcon Chambers

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘In our latest article about the Building Safety Act 2022, Joe Ollech and Tricia Hemans consider the recent decision of the FTT in Barclays Nominees (George Yard) Limited v LDC (Oxford Road Bournemouth) Limited HAV/00HN/BSA/2024/0001 and 0002 (“Purbeck House”).’

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Falcon Chambers, 19th June 2025

Source: www.falcon-chambers.com

Unreported nuptial agreements in England and Wales – International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Pre-nuptial agreements are not binding under legislation in England and Wales but can have decisive weight on divorce provided they are not unfair. Pressure is mounting for reform, because it is not always clear when the court will determine when an agreement is unfair. However, circumspection is needed before introducing legislation that would make such agreements binding. There are gaps in what we know about pre- and post-nuptial agreements on the ground. There are no data on how the current judge-made law on nuptial agreements is applied (or even if it is applied) outside the context of the ‘big money’ case. This article uses new interview data with barristers and FDR judges to explore these unreported nuptial agreements. It presents six findings that reveal much that is not apparent in big money cases, while informing key questions such as whether nuptial agreements should be made binding, if there might be unintended consequences of reform, and how fairness could be facilitated if legislation were to be introduced.’

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International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family, 6th June 2025

Source: doi.org

The importance of complying (and showing you’ve complied with) the procedural protections of the Mental Health Act 1983 – Mental Capacity Law and Policy

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘As Deputy Master Marzec put it at the start of her judgment in Appiah & Anor v Leeds City Council & Anor [2025] EWHC 1537 (KB):

1. This claim concerns the detention of the First Claimant (“C1”), under the Mental Health Act 1983 (“the MHA 1983”). She was detained between 26 April 2019 and 23 August 2019, a period of about 4 months, during which time she was given treatment in the form of depot injections of anti-psychotic medications without her consent and against her will. She alleges that such detention and treatment was unlawful and constituted false imprisonment and various breaches of her rights under the European Convention of Human Rights. The Second Claimant (“C2”), C1’s husband, claims an infringement of his right to family life under Article 8 of the ECHR resulting from his having been deprived of his wife’s company for the period during which she was unlawfully detention. The Claimants are, and at all relevant times have been, litigants in person.’

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Mental Capacity Law and Policy, 20th June 2025

Source: www.mentalcapacitylawandpolicy.org.uk

What is the role of the Attorney General in times of crisis? – Law Pod UK

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Shadow AG Lord Wolfson of Tredegar joins Marina Wheeler KC and Rosalind English of 1 Crown Office Row to discuss the legal questions to be addressed by the government in relation to the ECHR. We will follow up this episode with Lord Wolfson’s view of the UK’s obligations under international law regarding the current situation in the Middle East.’

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Law Pod UK. 23rd June 2025

Source: audioboom.com

Couple who tried to murder stepmother while wearing Poundland animal masks jailed – The Independent

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘A married couple have been jailed for the attempted murder of the husband’s stepmother, an attack carried out with a hammer and knife, while wearing animal masks purchased from Poundland.’

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The Independent, 20th June 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Nigerian communities to take Shell to high court over oil pollution – The Guardian

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Residents of two Nigerian communities who are taking legal action against Shell over oil pollution are set to take their cases to trial at the high court in 2027.’

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The Guardian, 20th June 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Discrimination still prevalent in profession, say women lawyers – Legal Futures

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Most women in law (88%) believe sex discrimination is still prevalent in the profession, with 63% saying they had personally experienced it in the last five years, new research has shown.’

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Legal Futures, 23rd June 2025

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Un-“sexing” Sex as a Ground for Anti-Discrimination – Oxford Human Rights Hub

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘There has been significant commentary on UK Supreme Court’s (UKSC) decision which held that the terms “man”, “woman” and “sex” under the Equality Act 2010 (EA) only refer to a cisgender man/cisgender woman. However, there is scope to assess what role separate grounds of ‘sex’ and ‘gender reassignment’ under the EA played in the court’s narrow interpretation of ‘sex’ as “biological”, sex (birth-assigned sex).’

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Oxford Human Rights Hub, 23rd June 2025

Source: ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk

Assisted dying set to become law in England and Wales after MPs pass bill – The Guardian

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Terminally ill people in England and Wales are to be given the right to an assisted death in a historic societal shift that will transform end-of-life care.’

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The Guardian, 20th June 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Public Land Law – Current Legal Problems

Posted June 23rd, 2025 in news by sally

‘While legislation and administrative frameworks shape how landowners own or use their land, land law continues to be understood primarily as a private law subject. Public interventions are conventionally treated as outside land law’s remit and are rarely addressed in property theorization. Responding to this absence, this article outlines the scope of public land law—understood as the governance of land by the state in the public interest—introducing the concept of property as authorized, where land ownership and use are limited by authorization. The analysis draws on examples from planning, leasehold reform, and public access legislation, alongside human rights protections under Article 1 of Protocol 1 (A1P1) of the ECHR and the newly recognized fundamental common law right to property, to show how public and private land law both constitute property. By examining these interactions, the article encourages greater engagement with public land law to understand how land law operates today.’

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Current Legal Problems, 16th June 2025

Source: academic.oup.com

Ten Years of the Single Justice Procedure: What Might Reform Look Like? – 2 Hare Court

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘The Single Justice Procedure (SJP / the Procedure) was introduced by the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015, its purpose being to hear high-volume, low-level, non-imprisonable offences swiftly. In the past decade, millions of cases have been dealt with under the SJP. The most recently published data shows that in one quarter alone, 182,902 defendants were dealt with via the SJP. That was 64% of all defendants in the Magistrates’ Courts in that quarter.’

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2 Hare Court, 11th June 2025

Source: www.2harecourt.com

Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 – legislation.gov.uk

Posted June 20th, 2025 in legislation by sally

Data (Use and Access) Act 2025

Source: www.legislation.gov.uk

Sentencing Guidelines (Pre-sentence Reports) Act 2025 – legislation.gov.uk

Posted June 20th, 2025 in legislation by sally

Sentencing Guidelines (Pre-sentence Reports) Act 2025

Source: www.legislation.gov.uk

NHS trust breached Equality Act over uniform policy aimed at curbing political symbols, staff claim – Local Government Lawyer

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘Three NHS workers have launched legal action against an NHS trust claiming that a new uniform policy unlawfully discriminates against them – and is in breach of the Equality Act 2010 – because of their pro-Palestinian and anti-Zionist beliefs.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 19th June 2025

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

A comment on Rogers v Wills [2025] EWHC 1367 (Ch): intention to create legal relations and free acceptance in unjust enrichment – 4 KBW

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘The judgment represents a very rare example of where the court has found that there was an intention to create legal relations in a domestic context. It also provides important guidance relating to mental capacity, which was of particular relevance in this claim given the claimant’s mother’s diagnosis with dementia.’

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4 KBW, 9th June 2025

Source: www.4kbw.co.uk

The Procurement Act 2023’s kaleidoscopic view of the public interest – Legal Studies

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘In this paper, I explore the notion of public interest embedded in the Procurement Act 2023. I use this new piece of post-Brexit legislation as a contemporary example of the difficulty in designing a ‘public interest centred’ system of public procurement regulation. I show how a mix of partly overlapping explicit, referential, and implicit public interest goals results in a situation where there are multiple sources of objectives contracting authorities need to consider in their decision-making, but there is no prioritisation of sources or objectives. I also show that, despite this kaleidoscopic proliferation of sources and objectives, and due to the unavailability of effective means of judicial challenge or administrative oversight, contracting authorities retain almost unlimited discretion to shape the public interest and ‘what it looks like’ in relation to the award of each public contract. This challenges the centralised approach to procurement policy taken by recent and current UK Governments and, in particular, raises significant questions on the likely effectiveness of ‘mission-driven’ procurement. I close with a call to reconsider how public procurement can foster the public interest, in light of its limitations as a regulatory tool.’

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Legal Studies, 17th June 2025

Source: www.cambridge.org

Psychologist who misled court about qualifications may have gone beyond remit in seven other cases

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘A psychologist who was found to have misled the family court about his qualifications had previously given expert evidence in at least seven other cases in which he may have been acting outside his remit.’

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The Guardian, 19th June 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Virgin Media Revisited… – Pensions Barrister

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘Edward Sawyer of Wilberforce Chambers revisits s 37/reg 42 and the Virgin Media litigation, describing the main s 37/reg 42 issues debated during the recent Verity Trustees trial and looking at how the proposed new legislation might potentially interact with those issues.’

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Pensions Barristers, 19th June 2025

Source: www.pensionsbarrister.com

Attorney general warns UK joining war on Iran may be illegal – The Independent

Posted June 20th, 2025 in news by sally

‘The attorney general has warned Sir Keir Starmer that Britain becoming involved in US attacks on Iran could be illegal.’

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The Independent, 19th June 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk