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29 May 2008 / Roger Smith
Issue: 7323 / Categories: Features , Legal services , Procedure & practice , Profession
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The NLJ Column

Advocacy: three approaches

The attorney general, Lady Scotland, favours the bulldozer style of “on message” presentation. Its limitations were, however, somewhat exposed at her speech at the annual ILEX presidential lunch earlier this month.

Lady Scotland opened with the news that the description of the Crown Prosecution Service's unqualified advocates, many of whom are ILEX members, would be upgraded. Out goes “designated case worker” and in comes “associate prosecutor”. This went down well. She then delivered the core of her speech: the UK has done much, and will do more, to make itself a world-leader in its toughness against fraud and the causes of fraud. All sorts of resources were be reorganised and re-marshalled in the assault. The relevance of this topic to ILEX was unclear: the attorney's sheer chutzpah, however, in making her pitch without a single reference to the contentious case of BAE Systems plc was evident.

Lady Scotland's silence was the more surprising since it later emerged that BAE's chief executive and a senior director had been arrested several days earlier

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The assisted dying debate returns to Westminster as Lauren Edwards MP reintroduces legislation that stalled in the House of Lords last session despite clearing the Commons
A little-noticed provision of the Crime and Policing Act 2026 has fundamentally expanded corporate criminal liability
Artificial intelligence is transforming legal practice, but careless reliance on it is creating growing professional risks
The law offers cohabiting couples surprisingly greater protection after one partner dies than when they separate during life
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