Home Lady Justice Sharp on YouTube | U.K Judge calls Heidi Schøne a liar | Legal Services Board condemn the SRA | Abuser John Smyth Q.C - the cover up | Professor Richard Moorhead | KISS my ... | The Honourable JEW | Sir Geoffrey Vos | LORD JUSTICE BEAN | CHRIS BOYCE, BIGOT at the SRA | The Pharisees | Capsticks condemned by Tribunal judge | Hannah Pilkington | No beast so fierce ... | Torill Sorte | Two convictions | Letters | NO-BRAINER | 2017 | Emails | Jews for Jesus? | Association of Muslim Lawyers | The Times | Bishop of Stepney | Barry Baines | Mr Justice Swift | SIR IAN DUNCAN BURNETT | LORD BURNETT OF MALDON | Mr Justice Murray: Restraint Order | Mr Justice Sweeting | GCRO Revenge | F*** the SDT | Mr Justice Poole | Hege Storhaug: the inbred Norwegian | Dissimulation | SRA | For the Post Office - read the SRA | SRA - Protest Convictions | Solicitors Regulation Authority 2024 | David Hirst barrister 5RB | SDT | Mr Justice Bennathan & the SDT | Alice Rose (née Gilbert) | Michele Souris | Guy Adams Daily Mail | Margaret Thatcher | Lord Caradon | Lord Justice Popplewell | Simon Tinkler of Clifford Chance | James Quartermaine, Solicitor | Benjamin Tankel | Mr Justice Jay | Ben Yallop | Victim | Football Association | Mr Justice Saini | Mrs Justice May | Mark Rogers Partner at Capsticks | Will Quince M.P | John Platts-Mills Q.C | SRA's Judicial Prostitutes | Norway's princess to wed shaman | Dr Jamal Nasir | Salman Rushdie | Johnny Depp | The Medusa Touch | Video of Breivik Oslo bombing | Uriah Heep | Chris Barber | BOOKS | YouTube transcript | 1950's Egypt newsclips | The Guardian calls out judicial racism | Report - Fundamentally Racist Judicial System | Judiciary hate criticism | Contact Me |

Professor Richard Moorhead is spot on. Read the Law Gazette article below. Sleight of hand - or to be blunt, dirty tricks - used by litigation barristers and their instructing solicitors can often win the day at Court. These same barristers later become judges - and members of the judiciary are equally adept at covering up the truth when it suits them.

Judges urged to call out litigators working to hide the truth

Judges should lead efforts to change the culture of litigation and curb the ‘lawyerly zeal’ helping to hold back the truth, a top academic has said.

Giving the annual Hamlyn lecture in London yesterday, Professor Richard Moorhead suggested the Post Office scandal had highlighted the role that the courts can have in preventing misconduct by lawyers.

Moorhead, one of the leading authorities on the Post Office scandal, said lawyers pursued a ‘flat earth’ approach by varnishing, skirting and suppressing adverse evidence to create a self-justificatory truth.

‘What we see in the Post Office Scandal is information being processed on the basis of what is "arguable" or helpful rather than what is true, fair, and balanced,’ he said.

‘A culture of "can we get away with it" is driven by wishful thinking and legitimised by lawyerly zeal. What is maximised is a self-serving version of truth.’

One of the key factors in exposing the wrongful conviction of hundreds of sub-postmasters and subsequent efforts to cover this up was the approach of the trial judge in the Bates litigation, Sir Peter Fraser, and his excoriating ruling.

The Post Office legal team had even tried – unsuccessfully – to have Fraser recused, and Moorhead suggested that efforts to pressurise the judge showed they thought this was a ‘tactic worth trying’. He added that the judge had taken a reputational risk in taking such a strong stand, and it was easy to imagine another judge taking a less robust line and not uncovering the scandal in full.

‘Big beasts, firms in particular, appear to have more institutional power than courts and regulators over the culture of litigation,’ said Moorhead.

‘They can fight the long game, through appeals, and in any subsequent regulatory investigation, as repeat players. Judges are exceptional of intellect and independence, but they also work alone. Better resourcing and support for judges, is both unlikely and essential to the management of cases with difficult parties and lawyers.

‘And however it is done there needs to be a concerted, ongoing, visible effort for regulators and judges to work together on cultural problems in litigation.’

Moorhead argued for a single, unified code of conduct across all regulated lawyers and called for an independent commission on ethics, similar to the Clementi Review of legal services which led to the Legal Services Act 2007.

The commission’s central agenda should be how to improve honesty, integrity and effectiveness in the use of law and would need to be independent of, but also working with, government, the professions, the courts and regulators.

Moorhead also suggested there may be a case for firmer regulation of litigation as a reserved matter and disclosure in particular.

‘It is not enough to think I have an argument for saying that is not misleading; my obligation, the particular, scrupulous, active obligation, is on me not to mislead anyone or to be complicit in misleading anyone in the context I am operating in,’ he added.

Law Society Gazette
By John Hyde
14 November 2024
Original article HERE



Web Analytics Made Easy -
StatCounter