Recent Posts

Indian-origin couple wins race discrimination case over adoption, awarded £120,000 in damages

An Indian-origin couple based in Berkshire, UK have been awarded £120,000 in damages after a judge ruled that they were discriminated against on the basis of race by not being allowed to adopt a child.

Sandeep and Reena Mander had their application to join a register of approved adopters turned down because of their Indian ancestry, and were told their chances would be improved if they looked to adopt in India or Pakistan.

Indian-origin couple wins race discrimination case over adoption, awarded £120,000 in damages 

In one of the largest ever corporate fines for bribery, UK court asks Airbus to pay record £3bn in fines for ‘endemic’ corruption

Airbus, Europe’s largest aerospace multinational, is to pay a record £3bn in penalties after admitting before the high court in London it had paid huge bribes on an “endemic” basis to land contracts in 20 countries. 

The planemaker reached settlements with investigators in the UK, France and the US to end inquiries that started four years ago.

Anti-corruption investigators hailed the result as the largest ever corporate fine for bribery in the world after judges declared that the corruption was “grave, pervasive and pernicious”.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2020/jan/31/airbus-to-pay-record-3bn-in-fines-for-endemic-corruption

Apple hit with $27 million fine for slowing down iPhones in France

France is taking Apple to task for slowing down older iPhones with software updates. The country has fined the tech giant €25 million ($27.4 million) for “deceptive commercial practice[s] by omission”.

Consumer watchdogs in the country say owners of older iPhones should have been notified that upgrading their operating system in 2017 would have resulted in worse performance. (Apple admitted to throttling the phones three years ago, prompting lawsuits and eventually forcing the company to offer discounted battery replacements as compensation.)

The fine will let Apple avoid a public and potentially embarrassing trial around the matter.

“This is a historic victory against scandalous ready-to-rubbish practices, for consumers as well as the environment,” Laetitia Vasseur and Samuel Sauvage, co-founders of Halt Planned Obsolescence, which pushed French prosecutors to open the inquiry, told AFP. 

The pair have not ruled out filing claims for additional damages for iPhone users.

https://fortune.com/2020/02/07/apple-iphone-slowdown-update-fine-france/

US Supreme Court takes new aim at unwritten rules

The U.S. Supreme Court has issued its newest guidance in its ongoing effort to formalise previously unwritten rules for lawyers on its procedures.

The latest installment concerns scheduling at the justices’ private conferences and requests for Supreme Court review, known as petitions for certiorari or cert-stage petitions. In October, the justices formalized informal rules relating to amicus, or briefs from outside parties.

The new guidance “does not appear to change any existing practices,” said Supreme Court practitioner and McDermott Will & Emery partner Paul Hughes.

It looks like this guidance, like the amicus one, “is intended primarily to make known to all (and official) rules and practices that have been unwritten but well known to regular Supreme Court practitioners for a while,” said Supreme Court veteran Sarah Harrington of Goldstein and Russell.

“The Court may have chosen to provide written guidance on these commonly-recurring procedural issues so that counsel who do not regularly appear before the Court may have a more fulsome appreciation of standard practices,” Hughes said.

https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/supreme-court-takes-new-aim-at-unwritten-rules

Accused of illegality in the capture, storage and use of interceptions of bulk data, MI5 ordered by Judge not to delete databanks before end of surveillance trial

UK’s domestic counter-intelligence and security agency MI5 has been ordered by a senior judge not to delete vast databanks of personal information it is storing pending the outcome of a trial over the legality of its surveillance procedures.

The case being heard by Lord Justice Singh, the president of the investigatory powers tribunal (IPT), is an attempt to establish the extent of internal failures – admitted last year by MI5 – over the way the security service captures, processes, stores and uses the bulk interceptions of data acquired through surveillance and hacking programmes.

MI5 has a duty to ensure such material is held no longer than required or copied more often than needed. It has been accused of operating “ungoverned spaces” where such regulatory duties were routinely ignored.

The IPT hears complaints about the operation of the intelligence services.

Lord Justice Singh delivered a sharp rebuke to lawyers for MI5 who questioned the feasibility of his legal directive. “This is an order of a judicial tribunal,” Singh said. “If it turns out the respondents [MI5] have breached the orders of the tribunal, that will have consequences.”

The sharp exchange between the judge and MI5’s lawyers came at the end of an opening hearing into a joint-claim by the human rights groups Liberty and Privacy International. Both have called for interception warrants obtained unlawfully by MI5 to be quashed.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/feb/10/judge-orders-mi5-not-to-delete-databanks-surveillance-trial-interceptions-bulk-data

California Supreme Court: Time Spent During Exit Searches is Compensable

Handing down yet another decision broadening the scope of what is considered compensable work time under California’s Wage Orders, the California Supreme Court has held that the time spent on an employer’s premises waiting for, and undergoing, mandatory exit searches of personal bags and devices voluntarily brought to work purely for personal convenience is compensable as “hours worked.” 

https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2020/02/california-supreme-court-time-spent-during-exit-searches?utm_source=Mondaq&utm_medium=syndication&utm_campaign=LinkedIn-integration

Australia’s offshore detention is unlawful, says international criminal court prosecutor

Australia’s offshore detention regime is a “cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment” and unlawful under international law, the international criminal court’s prosecutor has said.

But the office of the prosecutor has stopped short of deciding to prosecute the Australian government, saying that while the imprisonment of refugees and asylum seekers formed the basis of a crime against humanity, the violations did not rise to the level to warrant further investigation.

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2020/feb/15/australias-offshore-detention-is-unlawful-says-international-criminal-court-prosecutor

UK family courts not safe for domestic violence victims, lawyers say

The UK’s family courts are not safe places for victims of domestic violence because some judges there hold “outdated views” on sexual violence and issues of consent, according to a letter signed by 130 lawyers and professionals.

The public intervention comes in response to a widely criticised judgment last year by Judge Robin Tolson QC in the family court, in which he ruled that since a woman had not taken physical steps to stop her partner from assaulting her it did not constitute rape.

Last month, Tolson’s decision was overturned by the high court. Ms Justice Russell said the judge’s approach towards the issue of consent was “manifestly at odds” with current jurisprudence. Russell suggested training may be needed for family court judges when considering allegations of sexual assault. 

The letter from victims’ organisations and lawyers dealing with family court cases on Wednesday goes further, calling for Tolson’s current cases to be reviewed.

https://www.theguardian.com/law/2020/feb/19/family-courts-not-safe-for-domestic-violence-victims-lawyers-say

Julian Assange put lives at risk, lawyer for United States says

Julian Assange is wanted for crimes that put at risk the lives of people in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan who had helped the West, some of whom later disappeared, said a lawyer acting for the United States in its bid to extradite him.

Almost a decade since his WikiLeaks website enraged Washington by leaking hundreds of thousands of secret U.S. documents, Assange, 48, is fighting extradition from Britain to the United States where he is accused of espionage and hacking.

He was wanted, said James Lewis, lawyer for the U.S. authorities, not because he embarrassed the authorities but because he put informants, dissidents, and rights activists at risk of torture, abuse or death.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-assange/assange-appears-in-british-court-to-fight-us-extradition-bid-idUSKCN20I0J8

German top court overturns ban on assisted suicide services

February 26: A German law that bans assisted suicide services breaches the constitution, the country’s top court ruled on Wednesday in a landmark decision in favour of groups that help people die when they choose.

The plaintiffs wanted to overturn a law that has since 2015 outlawed assisted suicide undertaken by organisations or doctors who accepted a fee for their help.

“The prohibition of assisted suicide services…violates the Basic Law and is void,” the Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe said in its ruling.

Lawmakers must now draw up new rules to reflect the decision.

Euthanasia is particularly sensitive in Germany due to the legacy of the Holocaust, when Nazis killed and carried out inhumane experiments on Jews.

Because of the existing German law, some people seek euthanasia via relatives or go abroad.

In its ruling, the court said Germany’s constitution includes a right to a self-determined death which encompasses the freedom to take one’s own life and use assistance provided voluntarily by third parties.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-germany-court-suicide/german-top-court-overturns-ban-on-assisted-suicide-services-idUSKCN20K1DK

Woman wins payout for stymied career in landmark divorce case

February 28: A London woman who “sacrificed” her career as a solicitor so she could look after her children has won compensation on top of an equal share of the family’s wealth after her divorce.

The ruling of the High Court of England and Wales could have implications for other divorce cases in which one partner has stepped back from their career for the good of the family, a lawyer said.

The Cambridge graduate was embroiled in a fight over cash with her millionaire husband, who is also a solicitor, after the breakdown of their marriage.

A judge has decided that the pair, who were married for about a decade and have two children, should split assets of nearly £10 million equally but that the woman should get another £400,000 in compensation for curtailing her legal career.

Justice Philip Drury Moor said there had been “relationship-generated disadvantage” as the husband was still able to enjoy a “stellar” career.

Details of the case emerged in a ruling produced by Moor after a recent private family court trial in London. He said the couple, who live in London and are both in their 40s, could not be identified in media reports.

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2020/feb/28/woman-wins-compensation-for-stymied-career-in-landmark-divorce-case