The Belfast Solicitors' Association (BSA) raised £3,500 for nominated charity Action Cancer after taking part in the Belfast Marathon earlier this month. Seven teams of five runners took part from law firms across Belfast, including McIvor Farrell, McCann & McCann, Madden & Finucane an
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Naas solicitor Luke Hanahoe has been re-elected as president of County Kildcare Chamber, the voice of over 400 businesses throughout the mid-east region. Mr Hanahoe, managing partner of Hanahoe and Hanahoe Solicitors, was first elected to the role in October 2019 and was re-elected at Monday evening
Northern Ireland firm Wilson Nesbitt has welcomed five newly-qualified solicitors across its banking and financial services, real estate and construction, and individual and family life teams.
Thousands of trafficking victims should be granted the right to remain in the UK, the High Court in London has ruled. Before the ruling, such victims could be returned to their home countries, where they risked being trafficked again. As a result, people often make claims for asylum but, having done
The High Court has determined that the legal costs of an employment injunction application should be costs in the cause after the motion was rendered unnecessary. The plaintiff had sought to be reinstated by his employer following his suspension on full pay during an ongoing investigation. However,
Applicants who alleged they had been deprived of their right of access to a court suffered no ECHR violations after Belgium declined to hear their tort case against the Holy See, the European Court of Human Rights has ruled.
Climate lawyers have urged the International Criminal Court (ICC) to investigate Brazil's president for crimes against humanity over his administration's policies in the Amazon ahead of the COP26 this month. The Allrise group has lodged a case with the court alleging that the government of Jair
A box left at the front door of a library prompted the arrival of a bomb squad – who discovered that it contained books. Police arrived at the library in Deschutes County, Oregon and advised people nearby to stay inside as they dealt with the box.
Ethiopian treasures stored in British Museum vaults could be legally restored to the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, UK public law experts believe. The 11 objects with great spiritual and religious value for the people of Ethiopia could be returned to their country of origin under Section 5 of the Britis
Matheson partner Helen Kelly has been named as one of the world's top antitrust lawyers by Global Competition Review (GCR). Ms Kelly, who heads Matheson's EU, competition and regulatory group and was the first woman to become an antitrust partner at an Irish law firm, is among 130 lawyers and econom
The UK government is carrying out an "unprecedented programme of rights reversal", human rights campaigners have warned. A coalition led by Amnesty International has sounded the alarm over the Police, Sentencing, Crimes and Courts Bill and the Nationality and Borders Bill, both of which are currentl
Fur robes given to former US president Donald Trump by the Saudi royal family have turned out to be fake. The gifts, which were given to Trump during his first-ever foreign visit as president in 2017, were seized by US authorities this summer.
UK law firm Shoosmiths has announced the appointment of corporate lawyer Andrew Jennings as a partner in its Belfast office. Mr Jennings is dual qualified in Northern Ireland and England and Wales, with a strong reputation for venture capital and private equity work.
Julia Launders has been appointed as the new editor-in-chief of the Hibernian Law Journal. Ms Launders, a deputy editor of the outgoing board, succeeds Matt Gregg in the role and will edit Volume 21 of the Journal.
Northern Ireland's High Court has ruled that Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) ministers have acted unlawfully by boycotting meetings of the North-South Ministerial Council (NSMC). Mr Justice David Scoffield said the boycott, launched by the DUP last month in protest of the Northern Ireland Protocol,