Part 1 – A review of hate crime by Olivia Chessell – 2DRJ

‘The well reported case of two teenagers convicted for the murder of 16-year-old transgender child, Brianna Ghey, offers an opportunity for legal practitioners to review the scope and limitations of existing hate crime legislation. The sentencing remarks of Mrs Justice Yip DBE in R v Scarlett Jenkinson and Eddie Ratcliffe, are considered in this two-part article which provides an overview of hate crime laws in England and Wales.’

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2DRJ, 26th March 2024

Source: www.2drj.com

Conditions on permission to appeal – Law Society’s Gazette

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in appeals, civil procedure rules, debts, foreign jurisdictions, news by sally

‘An order giving permission to appeal may be made subject to condition. In the recent case of Palladian Partners LP and others v The Republic of Argentina and another [2024] EWCA Civ 139, the Court of Appeal made an order granting Argentina permission to appeal the first instance judgment conditional on Argentina paying €310m to be held in escrow pending determination of the appeal. Argentina sought reconsideration of the imposition of that condition.’

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Law Society's Gazette, 19th April 2024

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Thousands of children strip-searched by police in England and Wales last year – The Guardian

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in children, investigatory powers, news, police, race discrimination, statistics by sally

‘More than 60 children a week are being strip-searched by police in England and Wales, with those who are black, Asian or mixed race significantly more likely to be targeted, new figures reveal.’

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The Guardian, 21st April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

SRA anti-money laundering blitz continues with £76k in fines – Legal Futures

‘The Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) blitz on breaches of anti-money laundering (AML) rules has continued, with more than £76,000 in fines handed out to a solicitor and four law firms.’

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Legal Futures, 22nd April 2024

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Train driver who upskirted female passenger avoids jail sentence – The Guardian

‘A Thameslink train driver who took photos up a woman’s skirt while she was asleep on a train has avoided jail, despite being found guilty of voyeurism.’

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The Guardian, 19th April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

Failure to address ‘ludicrous’ injustice of indefinite jail terms is ‘political cowardice’, peer warns – The Independent

‘MPs have been accused of “political cowardice” for failing to back the resentencing of thousands of prisoners trapped under abolished indefinite jail terms.’

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The Independent, 20th April 2024

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Lawsuit in London to allege Grindr shared users’ HIV status with ad firms – The Guardian

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in advertising, data protection, HIV, homosexuality, internet, news by sally

‘Grindr faces the prospect of legal action by hundreds of users who will allege that the dating app shared highly sensitive personal information, including in some cases their HIV status, with advertising companies.’

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The Guardian, 22nd April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

Woman resident in the UK for 39 years loses deportation battle – EIN Blog

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in appeals, criminal justice, deportation, fraud, immigration, news by sally

‘The Court of Appeal has dismissed the appeal of Mrs Akhtar who had been resident in the UK for 39 years (since 1985). Elisabeth Laing, Phillips and Males LJJ held that the Upper Tribunal had not failed to consider all the relevant circumstances when reaching its decision under section 117C(6) of Part 5A of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 and they dismissed Mrs Akhtar’s appeal. Judges Mandalia and Hanson had not erroneously concluded that a foreign criminal had failed to meet the statutory exceptions in section 117C(6) when deciding her rights under article 8 of the ECHR did not outweigh the public interest in her deportation. Mrs Akhtar and her husband (“H”) were both convicted criminal offences on 21 April 2016 and they were duly sentenced, respectively, to a total of 4 years and three months’ imprisonment and to 14 years’ imprisonment (reduced to 11 on appeal) for their roles in a substantial and long-running mortgage fraud. Mrs Akhtar was convicted of the offences of cheating the public revenue between 1 January 2004 and 26 September 2012, entering into an arrangement to facilitate the acquisition, retention, use or control of criminal property and two counts of conspiracy to obtain a money transfer by deception. She was sentenced, respectively, to 30 months’ imprisonment, 30 months’ imprisonment, concurrent and also 21 months’ imprisonment, consecutive, and 21 months’ imprisonment, concurrent. Mrs Akhtar, who entered the UK as a fiancée in 1985, complained that the UT did not take her long residence into account in considering section 117C(6).’

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EIN Blog, 22nd April 2024

Source: www.ein.org.uk

Man who raped girl, 15, in Bournemouth sea sentenced to six and a half years – The Guardian

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in child abuse, children, imprisonment, news, rape, sentencing, sexual offences by sally

‘A man who raped a 15-year-old girl who could not swim after taking her out of her depth in the sea off Bournemouth beach has been sentenced to six and a half years’ detention.’

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The Guardian, 19th April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

‘Outdated and offensive’: police in England and Wales barred from blaming restraint deaths on ‘excited delirium’ – The Guardian

Posted April 22nd, 2024 in death in custody, drug abuse, mental health, news, ombudsmen, police, racism by sally

‘The police watchdog for England and Wales has removed a controversial medical term from its incident forms after claims it plays into racist stereotypes and detracts attention from police brutality.’

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The Guardian, 20th April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

Cost liability determined following partially successful application for a final third party debt order (Chedington Events Ltd v Brake and others) – Gatehouse Chambers

‘Dispute Resolution analysis: The Defendants and Third Party who collectively advanced an untrue narrative in opposing a third party debt order were held jointly and severally liable to pay the Claimant’s costs. The fixed costs provisions in CPR Part 45 were disapplied in light of that concerted opposition.’

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Gatehouse Chambers, 18th March 2024

Source: gatehouselaw.co.uk

Tangled Webs of Trust: A Study of Public Trust in Risk Regulation – Oxford Journal of Legal Studies

Posted April 19th, 2024 in energy, news, regulations by sally

‘This article provides an empirically grounded understanding of public trust in the context of risk regulation, specifically through a case study of shale gas exploration and fracking. It offers insight into the factors underpinning public trust and explores the empirical reality of the socially embedded and relational nature of trust. The article engages with the often-neglected dynamics of trust and how relationships between different levels of trust (eg institutional, interpersonal, wider system) operate. It shows how trust, far from complying with many existing linear conceptualisations, is complex and messy, involving a web of ongoing and interactive relationships within and between these levels. By mapping empirical data against our theoretical understandings, this article offers an alternative insight into the trust relationship, better positioning us to understand trust as an ongoing process, rather than an end product.’

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Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 11th March 2024

Source: academic.oup.com

A limitation period applies to unfair prejudice petitions under section 994 of the Companies Act 2006 (THG Plc and others v Zedra Trust Company (Jersey) Limited) – Gatehouse Chambers

‘Dispute Resolution analysis: The Court of Appeal has rejected 40 years of “received wisdom” among company law practitioners and has held that a limitation period of either twelve or six years (depending upon the relief sought) applies in respect of petitions under section 994 of the Companies Act 2006.’

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Gatehouse Chambers, 7th March 2024

Source: gatehouselaw.co.uk

Does the Court have the power to grant newcomer injunctions? – Becket Chambers

‘Wolverhampton City Council and others v London Gypsies and Travellers and other [2023] UKSC 47 is an appeal concerning a number of conjoined cases in which injunctions had been sought by Local Authorities to prevent unauthorised encampments by Gypsies and Travellers. Such injunctions had generally been sought against ‘persons unknown’ as the members of a group of Gypsies or Travellers who might in future camp in a certain location were not known in advance. In some cases, the Defendants to the injunction sought had been described by reference to the conduct the injunction had sought to prohibit, for example ‘persons unknown forming unauthorised encampments within the Borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth’.’

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Becket Chambers, 2nd April 2024

Source: becket-chambers.co.uk

Evidence in a credit hire claim: what does the claimant need to provide? – Five Pump Court Chambers

Posted April 19th, 2024 in chambers articles, damages, evidence, insurance, news by sally

‘Credit hire claims often involve large sums of money, the majority of which is from the credit of the insurer. The exact amount of damages awarded is down, to a large degree, to the discretion of the judge so it is important for the claimant’s legal team to get as much of the evidence watertight before the hearing as possible. From experience at court, there are certain elements of a case which are hard to fix on the day of the hearing, but which can be caught in advance, and lead to a better result for the claimant.’

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Five Pump Court Chambers, 22nd March 2024

Source: www.5pumpcourt.com

Criminal Cases Review Commission apologises to Andrew Malkinson for handling of case – The Guardian

‘The chair of the Criminal Cases Review Commission has offered an “unreserved apology” to Andrew Malkinson for its handling of his case after he spent 17 years in prison for a rape he did not commit.’

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The Guardian, 18th April 2024

Source: www.theguardian.com

Two boys sentenced for killing more than 20 animals at environmental college – The Independent

‘Two schoolboys who killed more than 20 animals including rabbits, snakes and birds at an environmental college have been handed a community order.’

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The Independent, 18th April 2024

Source: www.independent.co.uk

BAILII: Recent Decisions

Posted April 19th, 2024 in law reports by michael

Court of Appeal (Civil Division)

AB, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWCA Civ 369 (18 April 2024)

Source: www.bailii.org

Recent Statutory Instruments – legislation.gov.uk

Posted April 19th, 2024 in legislation by michael

SI 2024/536 – The Universal Credit (Administrative Earnings Threshold) (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/529 – The Universal Credit (Administrative Earnings Threshold) (Amendment) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/527 – The Childcare (Free of Charge for Working Parents) (England) (Amendment) (No. 2) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/525 – The Recall Petition (Petition Officers’ Charges) (Amendment) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/524 – The Boiler Upgrade Scheme (England and Wales) (Amendment) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/523 – The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 (Amendment of List of Safe States) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/522 – The Finance (No. 2) Act 2023, Schedule 20 (Bilateral Safeguarding Remedies) (Appointed Day) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/521 – The Police (Conduct) (Amendment) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/519 – The Trade Remedies (Increase in Imports as a Result of a Free Trade Agreement Causing Serious Injury to UK Producers) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/513 – The Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 (Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) (Revocation) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/512 – The Representation of the People Act 1983 (Amendment of Schedule 6A) Regulations 2024

SI 2024/509 – The Merchant Shipping (Anti-Fouling Systems) Regulations 2024

Source: www.legislation.gov.uk

Government faces JR claim over litigation funding legislation – Legal Futures

‘The Ministry of Justice is being threatened with judicial review over the draft legislation that aims to reverse the impact of the Supreme Court’s PACCAR ruling.’

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Legal Futures, 19th April 2024

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk