Sports law: rules of the game – Law Society’s Gazette

Posted March 22nd, 2012 in advertising, competition, drug abuse, media, news, sport by sally

“The complex web of commercial and regulatory issues that surrounds sport is occupying an ever-increasing amount of lawyers’ time. That was evident at the Law Society’s Sports Law Conference, held at Chancery Lane last week. It may be true that, as Charles Russell partner Simon Johnson told the conference, ‘a sports right as such does not exist’. But that has not stopped the rights and laws that affect sport from developing into a unique combination of problems whose resolution requires a growing cast of legal minds.”

Full story

Law Society’s Gazette, 22nd March 2012

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Drug and Alcohol Misusing Families – BBC Law in Action

Posted March 20th, 2012 in alcohol abuse, courts, drug abuse, families, news by sally

“For the last four years, London’s family drug and alcohol court has been trying to get drug and alcohol misusing families back on track. It has done so by following a different approach from the traditional, more punitive measures adopted by the mainstream courts. Joshua Rozenberg visits the court to find out how effective its pioneering work has been and what those who use it think of it. He speaks to those involved in the day-to-day work of the court – including the district judge, the principals of the main charity involved in its creation, legal representatives and others with expert knowledge of the problems which the court’s family users must tackle to put their lives back in order – and talks to observers of the court who have reservations about its approach. Law in Action discovers how far this innovative – but expensive – legal model is one which can realistically be emulated elsewhere in the UK when public funds are under such pressure.”

Podcast

BBC Law in Action, 13th March 2012

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

The Supreme Court’s judgment in In the Matter of S (A Child) – An Analysis – Family Law Week

Posted March 19th, 2012 in appeals, child abduction, custody, domestic violence, drug abuse, news by sally

“Jennifer Perrins of 1 King’s Bench Walk analyses the Supreme Court’s judgment in In the Matter of S (A Child).”

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Family Law Week, 19th March 2012

Source: www.familylawweek.com

Why I’m a families man – The Guardian

Posted January 31st, 2012 in alcohol abuse, drug abuse, families, family courts, news by sally

“Nicholas Crichton, a family judge, tells Juliet Rix that we need more courts to help parents to tackle their drug and alcohol problems.”

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The Guardian, 31st January 2012

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Delaney v Pickett and another – WLR Daily

Posted January 5th, 2012 in appeals, defences, drug abuse, ex turpi causa, law reports, negligence, news, road traffic by tracey

Delaney v Pickett and another; [2011] EWCA Civ 1532;  [2011] WLR (D)  390

“In looking to the possible application of the defence of ‘ex turpi’ in a claim of negligence arising out of a road traffic accident it could be crucial to ask whether the injury in issue was truly a consequence of the claimant’s unlawful act or whether it was a consequence of the unlawful act only in the sense that it would not have happened if the claimant had not been committing an unlawful act. In other words, could one say that, although the damage would not have happened but for the tortious conduct of the defendant, it was caused by the criminal act of the claimant; or was the position, rather, that, although the damage would not have happened without the criminal act of the claimant, it was caused by the tortious act of the defendant ?.”

WLR Daily, 21st December 2011

Source: www.iclr.co.uk

Will the Family Drug and Alcohol Court survive? – The Guardian

Posted December 15th, 2011 in alcohol abuse, children, courts, drug abuse, family courts, news, social services by sally

“The court gets results – but funding cuts put it under threat.”

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The Guardian, 15th December 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Lecturer spared jail after schoolgirl died taking drugs at his home – Daily Telegraph

Posted December 2nd, 2011 in drug abuse, drug offences, news, sentencing by tracey

“University lecturer Brian Dodgeon, who admitted possessing a hoard of Class A drugs at his house where a schoolgirl died, was spared jail today.”

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Daily Telegraph, 2nd December 2011

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Public school gangster jailed for 30 years – The Independent

Posted November 10th, 2011 in drug abuse, murder, news, sentencing by sally

“A former public schoolboy who wanted to be a gangster was jailed for a minimum 30 years for murder today.”

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The Independent, 10th November 2011

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Ken Clarke: Prisoners must work in jail – The Independent

Posted October 5th, 2011 in drug abuse, homelessness, news, prisons, recidivists, rehabilitation, squatting by sally

“Prisoners should carry out work while in jail as part of the process of tackling the growing ‘feral underclass’, Justice Secretary Ken Clarke said today.”

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The Independent, 4th October 2011

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Drugs and the law: state of confusion – The Guardian

Posted June 2nd, 2011 in drug abuse, news, statistics by sally

“Forty years after the introduction of the 1971 Misuse of Drugs Act, more than 2.8 million people report using illicit drugs every year in England and Wales. While cannabis remains overwhelmingly the most popular, this Home Office total also includes 800,000 mainly young adults who put the country at the top of the European league table for powder cocaine use.”

Full story

The Guardian, 2nd June 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

How a specialist court is helping families riven by addiction – The Guardian

Posted May 26th, 2011 in alcoholism, care orders, drug abuse, families, news by sally

“The family drug and alcohol court is making a difference in breaking the intergenerational cycle of self-destructive behaviour.”

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The Guardian, 26th May 2011

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Jailed heroin restraint mother Julia Saker loses appeal – BBC News

Posted April 20th, 2011 in appeals, drug abuse, false imprisonment, news, sentencing by sally

“A Kent mother who was jailed for tying up her daughter to stop her buying heroin has lost an appeal against her prison sentence.”

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BBC News, 19th April 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Naked burglar fails to get jail sentence overturned – BBC News

Posted March 30th, 2011 in appeals, burglary, drug abuse, indecent exposure, news, sentencing, trespass by sally

“A naked burglar who broke into the homes of two families has failed to persuade judges that his indefinite jail term was unfair.”

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BBC News, 29th March 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Drink drivers lose right to demand blood tests – Daily Telegraph

Posted March 22nd, 2011 in alcohol abuse, dangerous driving, drug abuse, evidence, news by sally

“Motorists who are marginally over the limit are to lose the right to demand a blood test under the biggest changes to drink-drive law in over 40 years.”

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Daily Telegraph, 21st March 2011

Source: www.telegraph.co.uk

Drug-driving detector is a step closer, say ministers – BBC News

Posted January 17th, 2011 in drug abuse, news, road traffic offences by sally

“Police forces in Great Britain are a step closer to having a new device to test drivers for drugs.”

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BBC News, 14th January 2011

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Ken Clarke’s prison reforms will spare mentally ill offenders jail – The Guardian

Posted November 8th, 2010 in drug abuse, mental health, news, prisons by sally

“Thousands of criminals with serious mental illnesses or drug addictions will no longer be sent to prison but will instead be offered ‘voluntary’ treatment in hospital, under controversial proposals to be unveiled tomorrow.”

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The Guardian, 7th November 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Ricky Hatton stripped of boxing licence – BBC News

Posted September 24th, 2010 in drug abuse, licensing, news, sport by sally

“Ricky Hatton has been stripped of his licence to box at a British Boxing Board of Control (BBBC) hearing but can still work as a promoter in the sport.”

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BBC News, 24th September 2010

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

George Michael jailed for eight weeks – The Guardian

Posted September 14th, 2010 in drug abuse, news, road traffic offences, sentencing by sally

“George Michael was today sentenced to eight weeks in prison for a drug-driving offence.”

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The Guardian, 14th September 2010

Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Woman escapes jail for urinating on memorial – The Independent

“A woman branded ‘Britain’s most disgusting person’ by veterans after she was convicted of urinating on a war memorial was given a suspended sentence today.”

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The Independent, 25th August 2010

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Call for drug users to face civil penalties – The Independent

Posted July 27th, 2010 in drug abuse, fines, news, penalties by sally

“Drug users should face civil sanctions such as fines or the loss of their driving licence instead of criminal penalties, a former government drugs adviser said today.”

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The Independent, 27th July 2010

Source: www.independent.co.uk