header-logo header-logo

13 October 2020
Issue: 7906 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
printer mail-detail

Solicitors facing hatred, abuse & threats

Immigration and asylum lawyers targeted for daily online abuse

A law firm has warned its solicitors are receiving daily abuse and threats from members of the public for its legal aid, immigration and asylum work.

Legal aid practice Duncan Lewis issued a lengthy statement this week, calling on the government and sections of the media to stop their anti-lawyer rhetoric ‘which creates hatred not only of immigration and publicly funded lawyers, but of immigrants generally.

‘We are now seeing our lawyers experience abusive behaviour and receive abhorrent and threatening messages online daily for simply trying to do their job and be a voice for the most vulnerable: victims of torture, victims of trafficking and unaccompanied asylum-seeking children. This has to stop.

‘Please be assured that we do not deal with cases we think have no merit…If a lawyer pursues unjustifiable “endless legal claims” as [Home Secretary] Priti Patel alleges, they are not paid.’

It was reported last week that a violent knife attack took place at a law firm in September. For security reasons, the firm has not been identified.

The escalating rhetoric prompted Bar Council Chair, Amanda Pinto QC to write to the prime minister to demand an apology. Both the PM and the Home Secretary made derogatory comments about ‘lefty lawyers’ in their speeches at Conservative Party Conference last week.

Pinto said: ‘There should never be a situation when a British Prime Minister, Home Secretary and other government ministers need to be called upon to stop deliberately inflammatory language towards a profession simply doing its job in the public interest.

‘Shockingly, we've arrived at that point. Even if it was never the intention of this government to incite violence against members of the legal profession, the fact the personal safety of lawyers is now at risk demands an immediate retraction of the ill-judged comments made in recent weeks by the Prime Minister and the Home Secretary, as well as a public apology.’

 

Issue: 7906 / Categories: Legal News , Profession
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

DAC Beachcroft—Paul Brehony

DAC Beachcroft—Paul Brehony

Commercial disputes practice expands with partner hire in London

Ward Hadaway—Maria Coster

Ward Hadaway—Maria Coster

Partner appointed to lead family and matrimonial department in Leeds

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Commercial property team expands in Manchester with partner appointment

NEWS
Financial protections for domestic abuse victims would be strengthened and cohabiting couples be given inheritance and separation rights, under historic government proposals
Doctors and nurses could be sued for mistakes made by the artificial intelligence (AI) equipment they use to treat patients, researchers have warned
The law sector has been chosen as the testing ground for the government’s AI Growth Labs—speeding up development, testing and regulatory compliance so software can be market-ready more quickly
A range of options beyond burial, cremation and burial at sea could become legally available, under Law Commission recommendations
Artificial intelligence (AI) legal assistants will be deployed to cut delays in the Crown Court, ministers have announced
back-to-top-scroll