Starmer in public row with most senior judge over Gaza immigration decision – The Independent

Posted February 19th, 2025 in appeals, government departments, immigration, Israel, judges, judiciary, news, parliament by sally

‘Sir Keir Starmer has found himself in a row with the most senior judge in England and Wales after criticising an immigration decision at last week’s Prime Minister’s Questions.’

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The Independent, 19th February 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Retailers to be required to report suspicious or bulk purchases of knives – The Guardian

‘Retailers will be required to report suspicious or bulk purchases of knives, and those caught selling blades to under-18s will face tougher sentences under a new raft of measures to clamp down on young people’s access to weapons labelled Ronan’s law.’

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The Guardian, 19th February 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Third party paying off Bankruptcy Petition Debt – 33 Bedford Row

Posted February 18th, 2025 in bankruptcy, chambers articles, debts, insolvency, news, third parties by sally

‘In England and Wales, where a bankruptcy petition (the “Petition”) has been presented against a debtor/defendant, one potential option the debtor/defendant (“Debtor”) may seem to have available, in order to avoid a bankruptcy order, is to ask family, friend(s) or a colleague(s) etc. (a “Third Party”), to pay off the Petition debt for the Debtor. If the Debtor is fortunate enough to have a Third Party willing to do this:

(a) will this amount to the Petition debt being properly satisfied, such that the Petition must be dismissed?

(b) should the Third Party payment be made direct to the Petitioner (i.e. not to the Debtor for the Debtor to then forward it on to the Petitioner)?

(c) must the Third Party make a gift of the money, or can the payment be part of a loan arrangement with the Debtor?’

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33 Bedford Row, 16th February 2025

Source: www.33bedfordrow.co.uk

Norman Hay Plc (in Member’s Voluntary Liquidation) v Marsh Ltd – 4 New Square

Posted February 18th, 2025 in appeals, causation, chambers articles, insolvency, negligence, news by sally

‘In this case analysis, Nicholas Broomfield and Diarmuid Laffan discuss Norman Hay Plc v Marsh Ltd, examining its treatment of causation principles in brokers’ negligence claims and its clarification of the limited circumstances in which Dalamd Ltd v Butterworth Spengler Commercial Ltd [2018] EWHC 2558 (Comm) applies.’

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4 New Square, 11th February 2025

Source: www.4newsquare.com

Supermarket wins farmer protest injunction – OUT-LAW.com

Posted February 18th, 2025 in agriculture, demonstrations, injunctions, news, roads by sally

‘A major UK supermarket has won an injunction to prohibit farmers from protesting at its distribution centres and from blocking nearby access roads.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 17th February 2025

Source: www.pinsentmasons.com

“Accusation without evidence” – tribunal slams SRA prosecution – Legal Futures

‘The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) has castigated the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) for prosecuting a law firm and two partners based on “accusation without evidence”.’

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Legal Futures, 18th February 2025

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Independent Sentencing Review – gov.uk

Posted February 18th, 2025 in criminal justice, imprisonment, Ministry of Justice, news, prisons, sentencing by sally

“The Independent Sentencing Review, chaired by David Gauke, has published Part 1 of the report.”

Full report

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gov.uk, 18th February 2025

Source: www.gov.uk

Legal centre and barrister cleared of negligence after five-year fight – Law Society’s Gazette

‘The High Court has dismissed negligence allegations which had been hanging over a barrister and legal advice centre for more than five years.’

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Law Society's Gazette, 17th February 2025

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

In depth: AI regulation falters as UK snubs international accord – Law Society’s Gazette

‘Legal controls over development and use of artificial intelligence hit an obstacle this week, as the US and UK refused to back a statement in support of AI regulation signed by 60 other countries.’

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Law Society's Gazette, 18th February 2025

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Repeat sex offender who ‘terrified’ girls jailed – BBC News

Posted February 18th, 2025 in child abuse, indecent exposure, news, sentencing, sexual offences by sally

‘A reoffending paedophile who “terrified” two girls when he tried to indecently expose himself to them has been jailed for nearly four years.’

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BBC News, 17th February 2025

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Woman jailed for defrauding her neighbour of £290k – BBC News

Posted February 18th, 2025 in abuse of position of trust, elderly, fraud, news, sentencing by sally

‘A woman has been jailed for more than four years after defrauding her elderly neighbour out of his life savings.’

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BBC News, 17th February 2025

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Jamaican drug dealer avoids deportation after pledging to only smoke cannabis – not sell it – The Independent

Posted February 18th, 2025 in deportation, drug offences, drug trafficking, families, human rights, news by sally

‘A Jamaican drug dealer avoided deportation after he promised to only smoke cannabis and not sell it.’

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The Independent, 17th February 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Woman awarded £94,000 payout after being sacked with a ‘jazz hands’ emoji while pregnant – The Independent

Posted February 18th, 2025 in compensation, employment tribunals, news, pregnancy, unfair dismissal by sally

‘A woman whose boss fired her with a text containing a “jazz hands” emoji while she was ill from her pregnancy has been compensated nearly £94,000.’

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The Independent, 17th February 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk

MoD in legal battle over evacuation of Afghan special forces commandos to UK – The Independent

Posted February 18th, 2025 in Afghanistan, armed forces, government departments, housing, immigration, news by sally

‘The Ministry of Defence (MoD) is embroiled in a legal battle over the evacuation of former Afghan special forces commandos to the UK.’

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The Independent, 18th February 2025

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Supreme court judges reject Reeves’ motor finance intervention – The Guardian

‘Rachel Reeves was dealt a fresh blow on Monday when her attempt to intervene in a high-profile supreme court case and curb a potential £44bn bill for lenders caught up in the car loan commissions scandal was rejected. Judges at the supreme court rejected the chancellor’s application, lodged last month, in which she urged them to avoid handing “windfall” compensation to borrowers harmed by allegedly secret commission payouts to car dealers that arranged the loans.’

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The Guardian, 17th February 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Prison system crisis due to overreliance on long sentences, says Gauke review – The Guardian

Posted February 18th, 2025 in criminal justice, imprisonment, news, prisons, reports, sentencing by sally

‘Successive governments’ overreliance on prison sentences and desire to seem “tough on crime” have driven the justice system in England and Wales to the brink of collapse, an official review has found.’

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The Guardian, 18th February 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Freezing orders in England and Wales – OUT-LAW.com

Posted February 17th, 2025 in damages, debts, freezing injunctions, news by sally

‘A freezing order is a court order which prevents a party from disposing of or dealing with its assets. It is therefore an essential tool for those looking to protect assets to ensure those assets are available to satisfy a court order.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 14th February 2025

Source: www.pinsentmasons.com

Bits of interest – Nearly Legal

‘A couple of brief notes on things of interest.’

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Nearly Legal, 16th February 2025

Source: nearlylegal.co.uk

Judicial Anonymity? Not this time. – UK Human Rights Blog

‘In Tickle & Anor v The BBC & Ors [2025] EWCA Civ 4, the Court of Appeal considered the High Court’s decision to anonymise the names of several judges who had made decisions in historic care proceedings and private family law proceedings (“the historic proceedings”).’

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UK Human Rights Blog, 17th February 2025

Source: ukhumanrightsblog.com

Subsidy control law and new statutory guidance – Local Government Lawyer

‘What do the changes to the statutory guidance on subsidy control mean for public authorities? Alexander Rose and Jonathan Branton explain.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 14th February 2025

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk