this edition - London Criminal Courts Solicitors` Association
Transcription
this edition - London Criminal Courts Solicitors` Association
London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 1 MARCH 2015 NUMBER 86 LondonAdvocate London Advocate The newsletter of the London Criminal Courts Solicitors’ Association SAVE LEGAL AID 2 Editorial 3 LCCSA Notices and News 4 President’s Report 5 Interview: Steven Bird 7 Not the Global Law Summit 9 Road Traffic Today: Where Tomorrow? 10 Obituaries 11 Book Review 12 Double Double-Cross London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:40 Page 2 Editorial Although the High Court – sadly – ruled against the association (along with the CLSA and Law Society) in the recent judicial review proceedings, we can now look forward to the appeal. It was difficult to feel beaten as I stood in Old Palace Yard on the afternoon of Monday 23 February, listening to the array of inspirational speakers, in the company of others who had braved the cold during their lunch hour. The freezing temperatures did nothing to dampen the passion with which we were repeatedly reminded that we provide an essential service to those who would otherwise be failed by a rapidly deteriorating criminal justice system. May I take this opportunity to thank everyone who supported the Relay for Rights event that started in Runnymede two days before the rally I attended. Oliver Lewis’s article on Not the Global Law Summit explores it in more detail. Several hours later, I breathed a sigh of relief as series 2 of Broadchurch finally ended. ITV’s “event television series” had not done our cause any favours with its portrayal of a Crown Court trial, ending, as far as I can tell, with a wrongful acquittal that was resolved by the village folk banishing the miscreant to Sheffield. It seemed a bit harsh on Sheffield but also a PRESIDENT Jonathan Black Butcher Sahota Skelsey Black 3rd Floor Headland House 308-312 Gray’s Inn Road London WC1X 8DP DX 37905 Kings Cross T 020 7837 3456 E [email protected] PAST PRESIDENT Nicola Hill Kingsley Napley Knights Quarter 14 St John’s Lane London EC1M 4AJ DX 22 London/ChanceryLane T 020 7814 1200 E [email protected] 2 VICE-PRESIDENT Julian Hayes Hayes Law 1 Lyric Square London W6 0NB T 020 3159 4248 E julian.hayes@ hayeslaw.co.uk bit medieval. Perhaps the writers were more canny than I had credited them, recognising that the Magna Carta is unravelling and the will of the village prevails. The threat of series 3 lingers. Should the writers wish to remain on point they could do worse than read the remainder of this edition. The interview with Steven Bird not only explains what the longest serving committee member has been up to but also touches on the issue of digitalisation – a discussion which is taken one step further in the article by Professor Roger Smith, who discusses Martin Langan’s pioneering road traffic website and implications of similar models for the future of our profession. It is very sad that, in this issue, we are also mourning two outstandingly talented legal aid lawyers: Mike Fisher and David McIntosh. Shall we see their like again? Although a great deal of gloom is in the air just now, I cannot help but continue to believe and hope that we shall. – Mel Stooks TV Edwards SECRETARY AND EDITOR OF THE ADVOCATE Melanie Stooks E melstookssolicitor@ outlook.com JUNIOR VICEPRESIDENT Greg Foxsmith Freelance Advocacy Services T 07980 846330 E [email protected] TREASURER Tim Walker Sonn Macmillan Walker 12 Widegate Street London E1 7HP DX 857 London City T 020 7377 8889 E [email protected] LAW REFORM OFFICER Tony Meisels Lewis Nedas & Co 24 Camden High Street London NW1 0JH DX 57056 Camden Town T 020 7387 2032 E [email protected] TRAINING OFFICER Diana Payne Blackfords LLP Hill House, 1 Mint Walk Croydon CR0 1EA DX 2617 Croydon T 020 8686 6232 E diana.payne@ blackfords.com COMMISSIONING/SUB EDITOR Gwyn Morgan Max Findlay Associates T 020 8870 0466 E gwynmorgan@ maxfindlay.com ADMINISTRATOR Sandra Dawson PO Box 6314 London N1 ODL DX 122249 Upper Islington T 020 7837 0069 E [email protected] LCCSA WEBSITE www.lccsa.org.uk MARCH 2015 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 3 LCCSA Notices and News More news on the website: www.lccsa.org.uk. Follow us on Facebook Twitter LinkedIn JUDICIAL REVIEW The judicial review, brought by the LCCSA and CLSA alongside the Law Society, challenging the Lord Chancellor's plan for a two-tier duty solicitor contract, was not successful. Leave to appeal has been granted. Members have not only generously given to the cost of the further proceedings but, via the LCCSA's “hub”, devised by Jim Meyer, provided evidence to support an application to extend the injunction suspending the tender process pending the appeal. This application was successful. NOT THE GLOBAL SUMMIT On 23 February, the LCCSA helped to organise a demonstration in Old Palace Yard, across the road from the Houses of Parliament. This demo formed the climax to the Justice Alliance's march from Runnymede, coinciding with a “Global Law Summit”, held in the Queen Elizabeth II conference centre. At the summit, the government used the anniversary of the signing of Magna Carta to promote British business, describing the event as “a unique opportunity to explore what the future holds for global business and the rule of law”. Marchers from Runnymede arrive in Westminster Aid – Justice just got funny” at the Union Chapel. A number of comedians, including Stephen K Amos, Angela Barnes, Alistair Barrie and Kevin Eldon, entertained a capacity crowd. PAGES OF PROSECUTION EVIDENCE In the recent case of R v Furniss and others, Mr Justice Haddon-Cave has ruled as follows: “Where ‘cell site’, telephone and similar material is served by the Prosecution upon the Defence in digital form, such material must be included as PPE for Graduated Fee Purposes, and payment made to Defence advocates on that basis.” COMMITTEE MEETINGS The next two meetings will be held on 9 March and 13 April 2015. The venue is the offices of Kingsley Napley and meetings start at 6.30pm. All members are welcome to attend. Those addressing the rally included Karl Turner MP. Maxine Peake, star of the TV drama, Silks, read from the Magna Carta: “To no-one will we sell, to no-one deny or delay right or justice”. A delegation then delivered a scroll bearing these words to the conference centre. STAND UP FOR LEGAL AID The demonstration on 23 February was followed with an evening of comedy, entitled “Stand Up for Legal MARCH 2015 CONSULTATIONS During the first two months of 2015, the LCCSA has responded to several significant consultations. Two of these were from the Sentencing Council, the first concerned with offences of robbery and the second encompassing health and safety, food hygiene and corporate manslaughter offences. The general consensus has been that while the Council’s approach to sentencing cannot be faulted, there has been a discernibly upwards shift in suggested tariffs. 3 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 4 The Home Office issued a highly publicised consultation addressing increasing concerns over the use of police bail and, in particular, the amount of time suspects might remain on bail. Lastly, there was a scoping paper from the Law Commission on offences against the person, the premise being that the OAPA 1861 is no longer fit for purpose. Looking ahead, the CPS is currently consulting on draft guidance on prosecutors speaking to witnesses at court. This has a closing date of 16 March and any comments from members should be addressed to the Law Reform Officer, Tony Meisels. way of gaining mandatory CPD points should contact the Training Officer, Diana Payne. FOOTBALL The LCCSA has formed a team to take part in the Legal Aid Lawyers League. Sadly, the first match was lost. The association’s opponents withdrew from the second and third games – which, happily, counts as two wins. TRAINING The LCCSA’s 2015 programme of CPD webinars (listed on the LCCSA website) offers members the opportunity to learn from a judge, two professors and some of the most experienced persons in the profession. The range of webinars include something to interest everyone, whether newly qualified or experienced: police station update, sexual offences, extradition, welfare benefits, Criminal Procedure Rules, corporate law, criminal law and evidence updates - and many others, with lecturers such as Professor David Ormerod of the Law Commission and Professor Ed Cape. Webinars can be watched live or later, at the member’s leisure, at work or at home, with each one providing one and a half hours CPD. Anyone with further suggestions for this enjoyable and convenient Back row (L-R): Ronnie Manek, Steven Bird, Greg Stewart, David Jones, Carl Newman. Front row (L-R) Joe Latham, Peter Fallen There was a triumph in the most recent game, on 24 February, when the team beat Doughty Street chambers by 4 goals to 2. President’s Report Writing these reports is like a serialisation: I signed off in January with the judicial review against dual contracts pending. The last weeks have once again been dominated by this litigation and our efforts to prevent these insidious proposals from being introduced. I am acutely aware that our work is largely focused on issues that affect high street legal aid solicitors and the fact that not all of our members fall into that category. The association needs to remain broad and I hope that those members not directly affected will understand.These firms have always been the first to support the association’s events, such as the annual dinner and autumn conference; and we look forward to socialising with all members at our summer party at King’s Place – a new, less formal, version of the annual dinner, in July. I am delighted that we have now been granted leave to appeal the Divisional Court’s decision against our judicial review application. Having sat through three days of the JR hearing and endured the wait for judgment, the association’s officers were notified that 4 the claim had been dismissed on 12 February. During the six-day embargo period when we could not share the information, Julian Hayes and I, along with Bill Waddington and Robin Murray, sought urgent advice on appeal – which was lodged before the judgment was made public. When Mr Justice Sales heard our application for leave and an extension of the stay, he was presented with evidence of the tendering process from the profession’s point of view, created via the 48-hour flash hub, thanks to our webmaster, Jim Meyer. Many thanks to the legal team, whose work has been tremendous. The advent of the general election gives us hope because, after months of discussions, Labour’s front bench announced their intention to scrap the dual contract schemes and review any further proposed cuts. Of course, I do not speak for all members on this subject, but, despite past encounters, I believe we can look forward to a better relationship with a Labour government, if elected, than that with current ministers. The association was not invited to the government’s Global Law Summit. This event was a totally MARCH 2015 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 5 inappropriate way to celebrate the anniversary of the Magna Carta but ministers don’t get it. Justice Minister, Shailesh Vara, said during a parliamentary committee: “If there was an issue with access to justice, we would not be hosting the Global Law Summit”. In response, the Justice Alliance walked from Runnymede to Parliament Square. I joined part of the walk and spoke at a defiant rally in Old Palace Yard. Matt Foot and Rhona Friedman were among those who put many hours into making this event a success. Thanks to Akhtar Ahmed, Julian Hayes and Nicola Hill, who worked on logistics for the rally, and to Greg Foxsmith for completing a hat-trick of events as compere. In the meantime, other events have come along: Leveson’s report, a critical decision on PPE and matters to do with digital platforms. I sign off on a cliff-hanger as we await the outcome of the appeal. Perhaps my next report will be written in a post-war era when we can start work on the reconstruction of our shattered system . – Jon Black BSB Law Interview with Steven Bird Steven is the longest serving member of the LCCSA committee and has played a vital part in recent campaigns Q: What is your history with the LCCSA? A: I was asked to join the committee some time around 2004. I'm a co-opted member now. Initially, I worked on police station liaison and, over the years, I've done a lot of responses to consultations. For a long time, I have been the representative on the Court of Appeal User group. Q: What have you been doing for the LCCSA since Transforming Legal Aid came out in 2013? A: The LCCSA committee tends to come to me to analyse what figures mean and, when the first consultation came out, the documentation was quite opaque so I produced a couple of schedules, giving a comparison of what we're being paid now and what we would be paid under the proposed schemes. It showed that, across the board, the deductions were much more than the 17.5% that the government said they were. In particular, deductions for police station work in London were averaging at about 35%. It's quite interesting that, when it came to the second consultation, they put forward a London police station fee which shows an average cut of about 18%. In some of areas outside London, I suspect that the analysis was not done and they are still on a 35% cut. Another point that we made in the first consultation response was that, when you looked at the figures, it became really stark just how much financially you would be losing when cases went to trial. There was some movement on this, too. The LCCSA put on a series of talks to the profession at that time and I helped with some of these, talking people through what the ramifications were. In the first judicial review case brought by LCCSA and CLSA, I gave a witness statement about what the impact could be for firms of a reasonable size. MARCH 2015 Q: Why have you never been president of the LCCSA? A: I have been asked and I've said, “No”. Being president has become a full-time job. In the last decade, almost every year, there’s been some major development that threatens the profession. The problem for me is that the structure of my firm does not allow me the time that is required to devote to the role. I’m sorry about that but it is just a practical approach. Q: Tell me about the Criminal Appeal Lawyers’ Association (CALA) A: CALA started in about 2002. It has about 30 member firms. The idea is to promote better representation for those appealing convictions and 5 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 6 sentences or applying to the CCRC and we organise conferences to discuss relevant legal issues. I was treasurer for about ten years and I’ve been chair for about 18 months. Q: What is your reaction to the High Court judgment in the recent JR proceedings? A: It’s very disappointing. The judgment seems to be saying that the court shouldn’t interfere with matters of government policy and that the Lord Chancellor is entitled to make decisions that will adversely affect access to justice. He has a duty under LASPO to make sure that legal representation remains available. I think if he brings his scheme in, he’s going to have a huge problem meeting those obligations. It’s obvious that any firm that doesn’t get a duty contract will find it difficult to survive on an own-client contract for long. We know that this is going to cause a problem; we know it’s not been looked at properly; and yet the court doesn’t seem really to take that point on. It will be difficult if the Court of Appeal takes the same approach but there is fight left in the association and therefore hope. Q: How optimistic are you for the future of criminal legal aid in the event of a Labour victory in May? A: I don’t think anyone can be particularly optimistic about the future, whatever government gets in. Labour was in power when this process started, in 2006 with the Carter proposals, so they don’t have a great history on it. But I welcome their statement on two-tier and trust it will be honoured if they win the election. What we actually need is more funding. We’re already getting to the point where it is almost impossible for firms to provide a decent service to clients. Take police station attendance: what you are likely to be paid, under the new contract, in London, is £200. That’s less that what you might pay for a car service. I do not wish to denigrate car mechanics but there is quite a lot of work and education in becoming a lawyer. Q: What are the wider implications for criminal justice as a whole, should the present policies be followed through? A: My real fear is for the future of criminal work. There are some good young solicitors around but there aren’t as many as there used to be. They come out of university nowadays with substantial debts and have to consider their earning potential. You can get a training contract in the City that will probably pay you more than you would be getting as a ten-year qualified legal aid lawyer. Q: What is your reaction to Leveson’s proposals? A: I think he is being slightly optimistic in certain respects. I’m actually very much in favour of digital working. I prefer to work from digital files than paper. 6 But it’s difficult when prisons like Belmarsh won’t allow you to take your laptop because it’s got a webcam built in. The idea of having more parts of a case dealt with without the necessity for a hearing is good. But the CPS is going to have to be much more organised and have people made responsible for cases at a much earlier stage. Where is the money coming from for that? Q: How geared up is your firm for the technical changes which are taking place? A: We’ve all got CJSM linked in to our Outlook; every bit of paper that comes in is scanned. Ironically, we run some files that are digital only until the LAA want to have a look at them for an audit, at which point we’ve got to print everything out. I don’t think it’s linked to the fact that I gave a witness statement in the first JR and have been fairly outspoken about Mr Grayling, but we have had two legal aid audits since the consultation process started in 2013. Q: Are you dismayed by the current poor relationship between the two branches of the legal profession? A: Yes. I wasn’t party to the meetings that went on but my understanding is that there was an agreement whereby each side would not negotiate separately with government. It’s the fact that this agreement was broken, more than the fact that they came to a deal, that is most upsetting. The criminal justice system needs a good solid independent Bar; for solicitors, it is really important that we have that choice for our client. I’m not sure that the people at the top end of the Bar understand the consequences of what we’re facing. If the solicitors’ profession is reduced to a much smaller number of larger firms, working at a much lower rate, while advocacy is not affected by the cuts, then it does not take a genius to work out that most firms will be looking to bring the advocacy in-house. Q: Take me through your communications with your MP, Mr Grayling A: I wrote a long letter to him, just after the first consultation came out, and this found its way on to Twitter. He did not offer me the meeting I had asked for. But, because he’s my MP, I went along to his MP’s surgery, with a couple of colleagues from another firm. We had about half an hour. I was trying to get across that we were ahead of schedule on the savings they wanted to make and that this had not been factored in by the government. My impression was that he did not really have a mastery of the figures. To be fair, this was back in May, 2013 and he did not have any advisors with him. I got the impression that he was an ambitious politician and that this was purely about saving money for government. He does not believe us when we say MARCH 2015 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 7 these cuts will be a disaster for the criminal justice system – or he doesn’t care. Q: Tell me about your firm, Birds Solicitors A: I set the firm up in October 2000. My old firm, Simons Muirhead & Burton, were based in Soho and I’d moved the criminal department down to Wandsworth in 1998. Then I decided I would like to set up my own practice. We started with about six of us and now we have 22 legally qualified fee-earners. We do criminal work, including prison law, anything from the most minor offence to VHCC cases and murders. We were on the now defunct serious fraud panel. We also do a lot of appeal work. We have a reputation for it and get about ten inquiries every week, probably taking on one a fortnight. We’ve had quite a few convictions overturned over the years, a number through the CCRC, including one which was overturned on the negligence of the advocate at trial. Q: And I believe you appear in Who’s Who A: I am not entirely sure why they would choose me for inclusion but apparently you are selected by a panel, which considers you to be a leader in your field. It is a bit quirky – I am nestling between Beckham and Blair! Q: Tell me about your background A: I was brought up in Romford and went to a comprehensive school. I went to the University of Birmingham, read Law with French and spent a year in Limoges in France, studying French law. After that, I went to Guildford Law College and then back to Birmingham to do a Masters degree. I joined Simons Muirhead & Burton as an articled clerk and was taken on by them in 1990 when I qualified, being made a salaried partner in 1993. I studied Law at university because it sounded interesting. No one in my family had been to university before. I got really interested in criminal law. Although I did some summer placements in City firms, I did not like what I saw there. Q: I understand you have continued your interest in the academic side of criminal law A: Yes: I wrote the Police Station Adviser’s Index, with Brian Spiro, now in its fourth edition. I’ve written a chapter in Taylor on Criminal Appeals and a chapter in Michael Naughton’s book on the Criminal Cases Review Commission. I’m writing a chapter on confiscation for a new book on drugs law at the moment. I write articles for various publications, with updates for Lexis Nexis. I have lectured at Doughty Street chambers, at Kingsley Napley and for the LCCSA. I spoke at a Justice human rights course a few years ago and I shall be speaking to the University of Sussex Innocence Project at a seminar later this month. I’ve spoken at CALA conferences a number of times and I’ve done a couple of podcasts for CPDcast. Q: Do you have interests outside the law? A: Apart from my family (I have four children), there is football. I went to my first Arsenal game as a present for my seventh birthday. Now I share a season ticket and so I go about eight or nine times a year. I play every Monday night (except when I’m at the LCCSA) for a group of veteran players near my home. When I was in France, I played for the University of Limoges First Eleven and for a French team who were in one of the lower national divisions. I’ve played for the London Legal League and I used to moonlight for a couple of City firms. But then I broke my collar bone twice and my wife decided that I should stop doing it so seriously. I’m playing for the LCCSA vets team. We got hammered in our first match but then defeated Doughty Street – a triumph of experience over youth. Not the Global Law Summit As lawyers and business leaders attended the controversial Global Law Summit, marking the not quite 800th anniversary of Magna Carta, the Justice Alliance held its own alternative events, with a Relay for Rights starting at Runnymede culminating in a protest outside Parliament. When Lord Chancellor, Chris Grayling, finished licking the envelopes containing invitations to speak at the Global Law Summit we can feel reasonably certain that there were none addressed to legal aid solicitors. Plenty of invitations were set aside, though, for large city firms, posh chambers, corporations and financial institutions. Jonathan Black, President of the LCCSA wasn’t too surprised that his postie never delivered an invitation to the £1750 per ticket event. “This was nothing less than a business fair, with Grayling using and exploiting the MARCH 2015 7 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 8 anniversary of Magna Carta to sell UK legal services. Even Dominic Grieve called the event a ‘legal Davos’. That’s why the naughty children like us weren’t invited,” he says. Black is highly critical of Grayling and the Prime Minister. “It’s all extremely rich of Grayling given his attack on legal aid, the probation service, prisons, and the contempt he’s shown for justice system.” Meanwhile David Cameron, who penned the foreword to the Summit’s glossy brochure, hosted the world’s justice ministers at Downing Street, while pretending the disaster in the justice system on his own doorstep wasn’t happening, Black says. Magna Carta gone missing Justice Alliance campaigner Matt Foot of Birnberg Peirce has also been flicking through the brochure. “Nowhere in their literature or brochure do they mention what Magna Carta actually says: ‘To no one will we sell, to no one deny or delay right or justice.’ I think there’s a good reason for that: the summit had nothing to do with Magna Carta and everything to do with promoting free enterprise and big business.” He points out the double standards where the government has been busy cutting access to justice. “You can’t get a lawyer for employment tribunal cases now, the work in family and housing has been halved, access to courts has been taken away and the quality of criminal defence is going to be decimated under the proposed dual contract and cuts. It is just rank hypocrisy calling this event anything to do with Magna Carta.” Foot is sceptical about the guest list too. “I see no connection between say Vodafone or BAE Systems and Magna Carta and access to justice. BAE deals armaments around the world, I really don’t understand why they were invited to a celebration of Magna Carta,” he says. Other invitations and attendees at the event also proved contentious. Liberty director Shami Chakrabarti pulled out, saying “My place is with the protestors.” Late invite shadow justice secretary Sadiq Khan declined his invitation, “A better way to celebrate Magna Carta’s birthday is defending the rule of law,” he said. Key note speaker Lord Green, late of HSBC, withdrew late in the day for different reasons. Chair of the CBA, Tony Cross QC, spoke at the event. Many are critical of his decision to attend. “By going there, we are tacitly endorsing what Grayling is doing to the criminal justice system,” said John Cooper QC. Cross disagreed and insisted on delivering his message from the platform. “Turn back from your intended course,” he told the government. Otherwise “you not only risk denying access to justice but also risk turning the Magna Carta into a parchment worthy only of note to historians, instead of the foundation of our freedoms of which we are so proud.” Timing The summit was beset with other problems. Some have raised eyebrows at the timing of the event, noting that the 8 actual 800 anniversary of Magna Carta falls a few weeks after the general election in May. “The government is rewriting historical dates to make political capital out of a celebration of the rule of law,” says Sarah Forshaw QC. Others have been critical of the event too. Peter Oborne, newly departed Telegraph writer, eviscerated the government for holding the summit while simultaneously considering a withdrawal from the European Convention on Human Rights and undermining the rule of law. “Mr Cameron’s government has launched a systematic attack on the legal aid system which gives poor people access to the justice system. There has always been a two-tier system of justice in Britain, one for the poor and one for those who can afford expensive private lawyers. The government changes have widened this divide, and run flatly contrary to Magna Carta,” writes Oborne. Former DPP turned prospective parliamentary candidate Keir Starmer agrees. “The best way to celebrate Magna Carta is to defend and protect human rights in the 21st Century. For a government hell bent on repealing the Human Rights Act, supporting this Global Law Summit was an act of supreme irony.” Protests Rhona Friedman, Bindmans solicitor and co-founder of The Justice Alliance, explains how the Not The Global Law Summit came about. “We wanted to point out the hypocrisy of the Ministry of Justice co-hosting a global law summit when they are curtailing the right to hold the state to account for unlawful decision making.” Friedman, who helped to coordinate the Not The Global Law Summit, is passionate about the importance of defending the principles set out in Magna Carta, particularly for the vulnerable who are now being denied legal aid and access to justice and is contemptuous of Grayling’s summit, describing it as “a backslapping corporate jamboree with very little to do with the values of Magna Carta or the rule of law.” The Relay For Rights began two days before the Global Law Summit with an event at Runnymede, where Magna Carta was signed, before supporters set off for London along the Thames path. Early next morning they were off again, as far as Putney, and on the Monday resumed from St Mary’s Church, scene of the historically significant Putney debates, arriving at Westminster for a rally at which Silks actress Maxine Peake read from Magna Carta itself. For Jonathan Black, the rally sent an important message to the people at the summit. “The bottom line is we get cuts from the Lord Chancellor while the commercial law sector were given a party which we, the naughty children, weren’t invited to and were told to mind our manners and be quiet,” he says. “Well, we weren’t quiet: we came downstairs and made a lot of noise!” – Oliver Lewis MARCH 2015 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 9 Road Traffic Today: Where Tomorrow? Martin Langan is a solicitor based near Chichester. He is not a criminal practitioner but he has, almost as a demonstration, set up a pioneering website. Look up roadtrafficrepresentation.co.uk if you have a moment. Bear in mind that the interest of the site is not only what it actually delivers but what it heralds. In my view, and fortified by research just published by the Legal Education Foundation and available on its site (thelef.org), this is one of a number around the world that indicates a future direction of legal services for those on low incomes. It gives a lot of free information in response to a series of interactive questions and then kicks in to provide automated representation by counsel where needed. It behoves all of us to consider the implications. Changed lives The context in which Mr Langan has developed his site is sweeping technological change. You will know this in your personal life. You are likely to have a smart phone; be familiar with living in a wi-fi world where you can work from anywhere; and be increasingly dependent on the internet for information for work, family and pleasure. Some of you won’t even have a physical office. If you do, it is likely that you are close to going paperless. The internet is increasingly changing our lives as professional lawyers. It seems inherently unlikely that it will not do something similar for at least some of our clients. To be fair, it may well be that criminal specialists are relatively sheltered from technological innovation, at least as it affects what they actually do rather than how they do it. Mercifully, and thanks to centuries of the common law and the recent accretion of human rights, those accused of a crime are entitled to a public hearing - something that inhibits wholesale transformation of the legal process. As do the constraints imposed on those of your clients who, regrettably and - hopefully, only temporarily - may be in police custody. Though, even there, video begins to impose itself. But, look around at sites like that of Cooperative Legal Services or Quality Solicitors. They are offering a series of packages for processes like divorce which incorporate free information on the web; electronic communication between lawyer and client; automated document assembly and “unbundled services” with the client undertaking a large amount of the routine work. The civil lawyers are sniffing out an audience that future guru Richard Susskind has called the “latent legal market” – those with limited amounts of money but able to afford services if they are cheap enough. MARCH 2015 They would be well illustrated by those who would once have been entitled to civil legal aid on payment of a contribution. A range of models are being explored that include virtual legal practices based entirely online; the creation of online communities of people with shared issues with links to lawyer firms; and various forms of coaching and support short of full representation. Such innovation is to be welcomed, provided it stays the right side of professional requirements to act in one’s client’s best interests and to be transparent about the relationship. Legal aid But, there is a dark side. Government departments around the world increasingly argue - generally without much detail - that traditional legal aid for face to face representation can be wound up because the websites will take over. This argument appears in no less than all three consultation papers on access to justice currently circulating in Northern Ireland. In them all, it takes no more than a throwaway paragraph or two. So, lawyers who have historically made a living from legal aid are going to find some protected niche (and don’t think they will survive for long) or reduce prices. Technology provides one way of potentially addressing the latter. And, around the world, you can see some interesting attempts. The LawAssist website (funded by the equivalent of legal aid) in New South Wales has videos on how to represent yourself. Court sites in the US do the same. You might, for example, develop videos for your clients to cover advice that you give repetitively. It’s several decades since I actually acted for anyone but I bet you are still explaining certain things about court appearances: the value of a suit and tie; the avoidance of chewing gum; the importance of standing up straight; and briefing on court procedures. You could have all this on a video you send to clients or even post it on your website as a loss leader. Smart phone penetration is almost100 per cent for those aged 18 to 24 - your key demographic. There will, in truth, be more possibilities in civil proceedings. Two jurisdictions, the Netherlands and British Columbia, are moving to integrated webbased systems that take a user through from diagnosis to court decision - the first in family cases and the latter in small claims. Similar ideas have recently been proposed - and welcomed by the Master of the Rolls by the Civil Justice Council in the UK. But, there are some lessons for all legal aid practitioners. The first is the need for imagination - you need to play with ideas of how elements of what you do now could be 9 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 10 transformed by using technology. Second, spend a bit of time looking at what’s around (begin with the report on the LEF site). Third, politically, there is an opportunity here for lawyers to graft their role onto advice for all citizens which might help to integrate the funding of lawyers with that of lay advice. Finally and pretty obviously, the net will not work for everyone. Probably only half of those on low incomes can make effective use of it for cultural, skills, educational or physical access reasons. We need to engage with the argument about what is and is not possible: we use the net but it needs to be integrated with individual assistance. We have to recognise that solicitors like Martin Langan are outriders of an inescapable future. Ignore them at your peril. – Professor Roger Smith Obituaries Michael Fisher 30 October 1946 - 7 January 2015 Photograph by Philippa Langley Mike Fisher was shrewd, humorous, reflective, but, most of all, modest – a rare quality in a lawyer. He never talked of his achievements; but there are not many who can compare with his contribution to criminal legal defence. Mike co-founded Fisher Meredith Solicitors and then Christian Fisher Solicitors, where he tutored and inspired a generation to follow. He was, fundamentally, a lawyer for the underdog who took on the unpopular cases, including the Balcombe Street siege, the Brighton pub bombing, and the Guildford Four. More importantly, Mike established new law that could be used by others to help protect the individual against the state. Amongst the collection of moving speeches at his funeral, the most poignant was that of his client and friend, Nick Mullin. Mullin’s conviction was quashed in 1999, as the Court of Appeal condemned the abuse of executive power saying, “The British authorities initiated and subsequently assisted in and procured the deportation of the defendant by unlawful means, in circumstances in which there were specific extradition facilities between this country and Zimbabwe. In so acting, they were not only 10 encouraging unlawful conduct in Zimbabwe but were also acting in breach of public international law.” My happiest work memory of Mike was coming out of the Court of Appeal with the triumphant leader of the Public and Commercial Services Union, Mark Serwotka, to a cheering crowd, as the Union had thwarted a legal attempt by a maverick group which had tried to seize the leadership. Mike characteristically remained in the court in the background. My favourite personal memory was us both admiring, at close quarters, the unexpected demolition of John Terry by Emile Heskey at Stamford Bridge, in a Chelsea-Liverpool game. Fortunately, I was able to see Mike on Boxing Day, where, along with his nephew Christopher and Marina Knox, we chatted for hours. In the knowledge he had terminal cancer, and despite personal difficulties in his life, he was completely content, had no ill-feeling to anyone, and was at ease with himself. We had a wonderful argument, a philosophical debate as to whether we are predestined. He relied on several philosophers, me just on Marx. He then told us a funny poem about his health, which I said confirmed we are not predestined. He didn’t agree. However, I now get the last word: there was nothing predestined about Mike Fisher. He was also a very proud dad, and our thoughts are with his children Eva and Maxim, and their mum Florence. – Matt Foot Birnberg Peirce & Partners David McIntosh 13 October 1962 - 3 February 2015 David McIntosh died suddenly, whilst preparing for his latest Old Bailey trial, at his home on his beloved boat at Roydon Marina. He was 52. David was born in Birmingham but, as a boy, developed a love of the countryside, having moved to Gloucestershire and, later, Dorset. He enjoyed horseriding and, in particular, show-jumping. He left for MARCH 2015 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 11 London in 1981, where he studied archaeology at UCL and, after graduation, worked as a bicycle courier and then as a housing officer for Camden Council. It was during his time at Camden that he decided to pursue a career in the law, and he began attending the College of Law in London in 1987. He went on to qualify as a solicitor at Edward Fail, Bradshaw &Waterson in East London and later joined MarcusBarnett in Islington, as a partner. It would be fair to say that David preferred a less structured work life and he soon headed to the Essex countryside to work as a freelance consultant with Buxton Ryan and Co. Here, anyone seeking to instruct David of an afternoon might find him out walking his beloved dog, Missy. David developed a love of advocacy; and he was good at it. He attained his higher rights and returned to London, joining Evans Bissett in Kentish Town in 2008 as a consultant and in-house advocate. Tentatively at first, he developed his higher court advocacy skills; but he quickly progressed to undertake the firm’s more complex cases. David’s analytical attention to detail and calm yet passionate advocacy skills earned him the acclaim of colleagues and fellow advocates, members of the Bar and judges alike. He had made the difficult transition from the magistrates’ court to the Crown Court with seemingly effortless ease, and achieved some notable successes. One can only imagine that greater success would have followed. Yet David always stayed true to his roots. Despite enjoying the bright lights of the Crown Court and the buzz of a “not guilty” verdict, he never became aloof or distant from his clients. Instead, he found a balance which enabled him both to engage with them and to remain sufficiently focused to achieve the best possible results - as, perhaps, only a good solicitor-advocate can. David was a man of fierce intelligence, sharp wit and enormous compassion, with an unconventional outlook on life. Admired, respected and loved by his colleagues, he was one of a kind. The profession has lost one of its best and we have lost a truly good friend. David, you are sadly missed. – Pip Evans and Claire Bissett Evans Bissett Book Review Criminal judicial review A Practitioner’s Guide to Judicial Review in the Criminal Justice System and Related Areas General Editor Piers con Berg (Hart £65) Perhaps surprisingly, this is the first book exclusively devoted to the topic of criminal judicial review. Do we need one? Having read this, I think the answer is: yes. Those of us who practise exclusively in criminal law know of the existence of JR and associated remedies, but not necessarily the range of areas that public law can cover, or how to bring a review properly where appropriate. In other words, you need to spot the point, to take the point. LCCSA members may therefore be interested in this book, which brings together areas of both criminal and public law and presents them in a guide which should equip any practitioner to access the relevant materials and prepare the relevant arguments. The book is thematically arranged, with topics tackled by different authors, both solicitors and counsel (many of these from 36 Bedford Row), setting out the key principles and identifying grounds MARCH 2015 arising from the conduct of (amongst others) the police, the courts and prisons. Judicial Review allows claims to be made against any public authority which has acted unlawfully, including the IPPC or even the LAA. There have been at least eight successful JRs against the Ministry of Justice under Grayling’s tenure. An over-riding concept in criminal judicial review is “serious abuse of power”, and the scope includes police investigations and prosecutorial decisions, as well as oversight of the courts. These topics are ably covered in this book, with coverage of the mechanisms for bringing JR – forms, procedures and timetables – and the availability of legal aid and the way in which cases can be billed (including costs orders). Commendably, the book does not steer clear of controversy, suggesting for example possible challenges following the recent appellate decision in the case of Davis. It has a clear and simple style, is easy to use and will meet the needs of the practitioner. In my view it will become the “go-to” book for judicial review. – Greg Foxsmith 11 London Advocate issue 86.qxd 27/02/2015 16:17 Page 12 Double Double-Crossed So: it seems Tony Cross QC, Chairman of the CBA, came through after all. Against advice from all sides, he took part in the government’s Global Law Summit, but this is what he said: “Our Lord Chancellor takes an oath of allegiance; he swears that he will protect the rule of law. This government is the first in history to have appointed a non-lawyer as Lord Chancellor. Historically, that role has been filled generally by senior lawyers not politicians who were less politically ambitious.” He went on to say: “It is rather ironic that while we sit here in plush surroundings, if we scratch beneath the surface of our criminal justice system, there is a significant number of our citizens being denied access to justice.” “Those firms,” Cross continued, “once disappeared, will not be able to provide work for the young lawyer. When they are gone, where will the future judges of the tomorrow come from?” He then attacked the government’s plans for reforms to legal aid: “The first port of call for anyone involved in criminal matters is the trusted high street solicitor. Our government plans to replace those 1,700 firms with just 527 firms. Justice will be provided by conglomerates and supermarkets of lawyers. It will lead to injustice for victims and defendants alike.” Over the coming days and weeks, many questions will swirl about, no doubt punctuated by claim and counterclaim. Did Mr Cross always intend to embarrass the Lord Chancellor over his own canapés? If so, why the “cloak and dagger” approach? Or was Mr Cross shamed into making this attack by almost every criminal lawyer in the land? If so, did the “Trojan Horse” tactic actually work, and was the publicity really worth it? Would it have been better (and more unifying) if Mr Cross had simply declined his invitation and spoken outside the event with everybody else who knows what the Magna Carta is actually about? During the ensuing debate, it is likely that few of the diehards will change their minds either about Mr Cross’s tactics or about which side of the fence they are on. It is only a shame that there is a fence at all. For me, the more interesting question is whether Mr Cross would have been barred entry if he had openly declared his intention throughout – ie by For anyone who wasn’t outside the Global Law Summit but now wishes they had been there, you can still get the Tshirt for £10. Contact [email protected] accepting the invitation but being clear about bringing his wrecking ball along. Would the Ministry of Justice have physically barred him purely to avoid political damage? Really? At an event celebrating the wonders of freedom of speech in the modern world? Now, I am not a PR expert but I would have thought that would have made a better newspaper article and photo opportunity. “Lord Chancellor bars critical lawyer from Global Summit on legal rights.” Photo caption: Leading silk being physically restrained by several G4S staff, preferably with tattoos. In recent legal news, an analogy arises. I hear on good authority that a police-instructed interpreter was recently refused entry to Leicester magistrates’ court. In fairness, this was not on the basis of something he said. Rather, it was on the basis that he was drunk. Yes, an interpreter too drunk to be allowed into the building. It is not yet clear which company instructed this interpreter, but it is clear that he was out-sauced. – Ali Parker Saunders Law Save Legal Aid 12 MARCH 2015