See, I wasn't going to bite. I have noticed that most of the older posters on this site treat this "Renegade Carpark" and his fevered rantings with an air of exasperated indulgence - such as you might a toddler who keeps wanting to get his willy out whilst the adults are trying to have tea.
However, this issue is too important for the debate to be clouded by those who don't have the first idea what they are talking about. I don't mind if anyone disagrees with me, but let's at least have a discussion from an informed viewpoint.
That being said:
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:27 PM GMT
'Lawyers argue the cuts could see their fees fall by up to 30%' - last time I used a solicitor they charged me £300 to write a letter and £25 per phone call - even when they rang me!
Well, that's embarrassing. Your first comment on the topic and you are ALREADY demonstrably wrong. When a solicitor charged you £300 to write a letter - that was PRIVATE law. You were paying them - hence the "they charged me" bit.
What we are talking about is PUBLICLY FUNDED LAW. What you won't know (because you won't have bothered to find out) is that 10 years ago the government thought it would be a great idea to pay lawyers one fee per case. So whether I spend 1 hour or 100 hours preparing - I get the same.
Fortunately, I have high standards and will prepare as much as is necessary, because it is about the client, not the money. But I am such a money-grabber.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:27 PM GMT
It's not like we have a solicitor shortage in this country either, every second Asian person I meet is a lawyer - the other being a doctor or a chemist.
It may interest you to know that the prosecution of "racially aggravated" crimes has gone up exponentially. Postings on internet websites can fall foul of the Malicious Communications Act and lead to a prosecution. You sail very close to the wind at times.
Now if you were my client, I might say that you were exercising your freedom of speech.
I guess we have to hope you keep you mouth in check before someone makes a complaint to the police. You wouldn't want to find yourself in need of those lawyers you are so disparaging about.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:27 PM GMT
The sheer greed by the legal profession has brought them to this point. From unnecessary court cases, to no win no fee, to the various useless public enquiries. Subsequent governments have been bleeding money almost continually from non-stop legal fees.
Again - "no win no fee" is a PRIVATE LAW matter. Hence the "fee" aspect. So not relevant to this discussion. Ditto public enquiries which are not paid for using the Legal Aid regime that we are discussing here.
Incidentally, I agree with you on both points. But it is totally irrelevant to this debate.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:57 PM GMT
You're deliberately confusing the argument
Quite rich - I've just proved that you have already confused it twice.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:57 PM GMT
the Legal Aid budget is being reduced, it's not being eradicated altogether. The lawyers are angry that they are being asked to work for less money.
Yes we are. We are angry because we are being asked to work 60 hour weeks for a self employed take home pay of an £26k (on average). No holiday, maternity, pension, sick pay.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:57 PM GMT
Y
We now live in an overly litigious culture with vast sums of money being spent on family law, immigration and asylum cases. This isn't denying justice, it's public money being spent on private arbitration.
Immigration/Asylum Legal Aid has already been decimated and is now largely privately funded. Of course, there is a solution - don't ever try and deport people. That will dramatically reduce the "overly litigious culture". Not sure that would fit with your particular world view.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 12:57 PM GMT
EDIT: And if you are outraged by the MPs expenses, they're miniscule in comparison to what lawyers on the tax money gravy train get away with.
Yes. Grayling earns £160k. Grayling's wife earns £44k to "manage his office". Part time.
Average criminal barrister - £36k. Before tax. That is what we are prepared to work for now. Cut that by another 20% and our position becomes untenable.
Keep swallowing the Daily Mail bullshit, the government love it when people don't bother researching the facts.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 4:23 PM GMT
Obviously guilty killers - and I mean obviously guilty - dozens of witnesses, public confession, video footage and attacking the police with a gun at the scene of the crime kind of guilty - should never be allowed to force the relatives of the loved ones to sit through that kind of ordeal all over again. It's morally disgusting and financially reprehensible.
Great idea. I hear it went down a storm in Nazi Germany or Stalinist Russia. Who gets to decide who is "obviously guilty"? You? What with that detailed legal knowledge you've demonstrated already?
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 4:23 PM GMT
When Rigby's killers said they wanted to plead Not Guilty, their brief should have told them there and then, it ain't gonna fly. Similarly, the CPS should never have allowed this court case to proceed due to the overwhelming amount of evidence against the accused.
I am willing to bet all my £26k take home pay that you have never sat in a conference with a client. His barrister would have told him that his defence would not fly. I do it all the time.
Turns out, we still have this notion of living in a free country where people cannot be forced to plead guilty against their will.
If the CPS didn't take it to trial they would have had to offer no evidence. So they would have walked free. Great plan.
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ 6th January 2014, 5:45 PM GMT
As always, I win -
I think the above would suggest otherwise.