Coronavirus (COVID-19)
In accordance with recent Government advice regarding COVID-19, many of our staff are now working from home. Letters sent to the office may not reach them straight away, and it will take them longer to reply by post. Please use email or phone whenever possible.

No good us talking if we can’t get anyone in the police to listen. Is there anyone there we can talk to?

 

John Middlehurst
Consultant Solicitor
Amphlett Lissimore

Tel: 020 8771 6861
Fax: 020 8540 1636
Email: j.middlehurst@allaw.co.uk
CJSM Email: j.middlehurst@allaw.com.cjsm.net (this email will only receive email from other CJSM accounts)
Branch Address: Amphlett Lissimore, 7 Approach Road, Raynes Park, SW20 8BA
DX: 318004 Wimbledon West



Follow us and keep up to date with our news and events

Email fraud warning
If you receive an email with details of our bank account so that you can pay us money, always telephone us to confirm the bank details using a telephone number you already know, not any number quoted in the email.
This is because the email may be from a fraudster, not from us, and the bank account details may be false. Criminals have been known to intercept genuine emails from solicitors and forward them on with the bank details changed, so however authentic the email looks you must not rely on it. In the same way, if you send us bank details by email we will normally phone you to check before we send money to you.

Amphlett Lissimore Bagshaws LLP - a limited liability partnership no. OC356781 registered in England and Wales.  Registered office: Greystoke House, 80-86 Westow Street, London SE19 3AF. Authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority

 

From: members@mail.lccsa.org.uk <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk> On Behalf Of sandra cacchioli
Sent: 28 March 2020 17:35
To: bridget.irving@yahoo.co.uk; Joe Mensah-Dankwah <Joemensah@foresterssolicitors.co.uk>
Cc: Chris PICKWICK <chris@pickwicksolicitors.co.uk>; Jonathan Black <jonathanb@bsbsolicitors.co.uk>; Members <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk>
Subject: Re: Common Video Platform - Remote Police Station Working

 

The common video platform CVP - could this be a temporary way of representing clients remotely at the police station?

 

The CVP is being used by the Tribunal service and scaled up fairly  rapidly in last few weeks.

 

It's MOJ approved and is being used for private hearings. 

 

It's a visual  link with sound and can link up to 21 people at different locations - and accessed via any device with an internet connection. 

 

To have a meeting/ hearing / conference / - one party who has a "cloud room" - bought from Kinly for £50.00 per month  controls the meeting and sends other parties a link, the benefit of solicitors having  a "cloud room" is that you can lock other participants out when you need to have a private consultation with the client. 

 

Surely something like this can be made to work? 

 

Sandra    

 

 

??

 


From: members@mail.lccsa.org.uk <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk> on behalf of Joe Mensah-Dankwah <Joemensah@foresterssolicitors.co.uk>
Sent: 28 March 2020 17:16
To: bridget.irving@yahoo.co.uk <bridget.irving@yahoo.co.uk>
Cc: Chris PICKWICK <chris@pickwicksolicitors.co.uk>; Jonathan Black <jonathanb@bsbsolicitors.co.uk>; Members <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk>
Subject: Re: from the LAA update - Can claim a fee

 

Here’s my experience of advising and assisting a client on the telephone. My colleague took the call and advised last night. The OIC called me at 10:30am today. I took the usual details and told him that I proposed to deal with it all on the phone. He said they had been told to expect that. (By the way, this was Kent Police, very cultured, in my view!).  I requested a copy of the CR by email and took down his verbal disclosure. I also took his email address. I ascertained that V had not given a statement and was not willing to cooperate. I told him I would have a consultation by phone and proposed to participate in the interview on the end of my phone. They don’t have a video link or PCU wifi  but we’d see how it goes. I said I was happy for the interview to proceed if he didn’t get reception. (I know my client, you see). Then the custody Officer called me, also in a collegiate attitude of mind. She agreed to take the hands-free phone into the cell and after my consultation, if I wanted to be in the interview, she would see if the OIC’s phone would have enough reception to call me from the interview room. I had my chat with the client. He’s an old hand well capable of handling a no comment interview. But I still advised that in a domestic where she has refused to give a statement, even though he had a self defence claim, it was best to go no comment. After introductions and the caution, he would answer the first question with no comment and to the rest either go no comment or just sit silently. 

 

I waited for the call but it didn’t come. Then when I hadn’t heard from the oic I sent an email at 1:30pm asking about the result, and that I wanted to be called if there was any issue about bail. Then the oic called at 2:50pm to say there’d been no reception in the interview room and the client was happy to do it without me. He’d gone no comment to the first question and silent the rest of the time. CPS had advised no charge so he had been released. Then the client called me from home happy at 15:29. That’s  5 hours dealing with one case without leaving my bed (well...). No reason I shouldn’t get paid the full fee.

 

I struggle with this idea that our clients are so very vulnerable, they have to see us to feel assisted. On average, (my stats) DPs are in the nick for 8-18 hours. When we attend, we are there for a couple of hours and only with the client alone for half of that time. (Except, of course for your serious arrestables). How are their vulnerabilities assuaged the rest of the time when we are not there?

 

Joe Mensah-Dankwah. 

Foresters Solicitors Limited

 

Sent from my iPhone



On 28 Mar 2020, at 16:29, Bridget Irving (via members list) <members@mail.lccsa.org.uk> wrote:

Very well done and many thanks for the huge efforts and hard work by The LCCSA and individuals involved in achieving this.

 

On Fri, 27 Mar 2020 at 21:17, Chris PICKWICK

Evening. Does no one have the answer to my question? Harvey! Jim!

 

 

 

Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

 

 

-------- Original message --------

From: Chris PICKWICK <chris@pickwicksolicitors.co.uk>

Date: 27/03/2020 17:55 (GMT+00:00)

Subject: RE: from the LAA update - Can claim a fee

 

 

Does there have to be a presence (whether phone or video ) during the i/v itself to claim an att. fee?

 

 

Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.

 

 

-------- Original message --------

From: Jonathan Black <jonathanb@bsbsolicitors.co.uk>

Date: 27/03/2020 16:53 (GMT+00:00)

Subject: from the LAA update - Can claim a fee

 

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/coronavirus-covid-19-legal-aid-agency-contingency-response?utm_source=c41c7d7f-183a-4ad9-a80c-da4e30f2da1d&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=govuk-notifications&utm_content=immediate#financial-support

Claiming police station attendance fee

Providers are still required to provide advice and assistance to clients in custody suites.

Depending on local police practices and their own health concerns, you may not be able to physically attend on those clients.

Should an attendance be made by other means (phone or video), either because of a police force’s contingency arrangements or because current Government safeguarding guidelines mean you cannot physically, you can claim the Police Station Attendance Fixed Fee appropriate to the location.

A file note should be kept as to the circumstances of the arrangements, confirming both the police and the client were happy to proceed without a physical attendance.

Providers should claim as usual for the Telephone Advice Fixed Fee as appropriate, but they should not claim for Telephone Advice Fixed Fee and the Police Station Attendance Fixed Fee for the same matter. A DSCC Reference Number will also be required as normal.

 


To unsubscribe from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To take a break from receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To resume receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.


To unsubscribe from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To take a break from receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To resume receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

Foresters Solicitors Limited is registered in England and Wales, with registered office at 155 Hoe Street London E17 3AL. Company Number 6650930. Directors: Joe Mensah-Dankwah, Alan Hardy Boulton, John Yiannourides. This firm is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority.

This email is confidential and may be privileged. It is for the use of the named recipients only. If you have received it in error, please notify us immediately and delete it from your computer system. Please do not copy or disclose its contents to any person or body.


Foresters_Email_Disclaimer_201607


To unsubscribe from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To take a break from receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To resume receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.


To unsubscribe from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To take a break from receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.

To resume receiving emails from the LCCSA Members eGroup click here.