
High profile NZ lawyers drop Dotcom
A high profile Queen's Counsel and one of the country's biggest law firms are stepping down from Kim Dotcom's legal team.
A high profile Queen's Counsel and one of the country's biggest law firms are stepping down from Kim Dotcom's legal team.
More than three times as many lawyers were struck off this year than in 2009 and the trend is continuing.
A lawyer who misspelled the name of the trial judge incurs the wrath Justice Wylie and complaints against judges on the decline in this week's Caseload.
Struck-off Auckland ex-lawyer Barry Hart is back in the saddle, this time as a "lay advocate" representing banned jockey David Walker.
It has taken a while, but a fancy feed to pay tribute to Justice Simon Moore QC is rescheduled for next March - a year after the judge was sworn in.
In Jock Anderson's Caseload today: a Wellington lawyer who made controversial comment during a rape case faces court himself and clash of the crocodiles.
Jock Anderson's Caseload looks at the goings-on around the courts and the legal fraternity. This week, a serial litigant is sunk by the cruise from hell.
Jock Anderson remembers a time when violent attacks on police officers were condemned and not brushed off by slick lawyers paid to find ways of shifting the blame.
More defamation damages awarded to Joe Karam, judges clamping down on media reporting and legal aid payments dropping in this week's legal blog.
The Law Society has not criticised Justice Minister Judith Collins over the naming of Sir Robert Chambers Lane in Christchurch, as Jock Anderson writes.
The Crown will not appeal a decision to give a teen who assaulted schoolboy Stephen Dudley before his death last year a discharge without conviction.
Crime barristers are up in arms over an increase in self-represented litigants and a surge in appeals based on the competency of lawyers, writes Jock Anderson.
Many are angered by the fact that the two brothers who who beat and punched Stephen Dudley have walked from court free, anonymous and unpunished, writes Jock Anderson
Failed finance company director Trevor Ludlow has done contract work for a receiver with his own fraud convictions since being released on parole.
There are signs the judiciary may be eager to restrict news media court coverage, writes legal blogger Jock Anderson.
John Banks is to be sentenced tomorrow after being earlier found guilty of electoral fraud in relation to his last mayoral bid. What is likely to happen to him?
As the brakes go on this fiscal profligacy, legal hand-wringers continue to whine about a so-called "justice gap" created by cuts to legal aid, writes Jock Anderson
Sally Ridge, a person described by chums as a celebrity socialite and keen shopper, has been snubbed yet again in the higher courts.
When a High Court judge is appointed one of the first things they are given is their personal copy of the Big Blue Chambers Book.
Veteran journalist Jock Anderson joins the Herald with his new weekly column looking behind the scenes at the legal profession.
Law firm Bell Gully has published new guidelines about what to do if the Financial Markets Authority raids your business.
Travelling the world as a New Zealand businessperson can be a heartening exercise, says Mark Lowndes.
Greg King's death is a tragic illustration of one of the burdens of the "standard conception" of the lawyer's role.
A lawyer from Dargaville has been has been struck off and rebuked by the Law Society for failing to respond to his client's instructions and then lying about it.
An Auckland property lawyer has been struck off the professional roll of barristers and solicitors after admitting charges of misconduct.