Corrupt lawyers 'threatening legal aid system'

NZPA
Last updated 15:21 27/11/2009

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A review of legal aid has accused corrupt lawyers of exploiting the system for personal gain with plea delays and backhanded deals.

The Legal Aid Review report released today said it was appalling where lawyers were abusing the system indifferent to clients' needs.

Dame Margaret Bazley, who headed the independent review, said there could be as many as 200 corrupt lawyers in the system and they should be disbarred.

"While there are very good lawyers in the legal aid system, there is also a small but significant proportion of very bad lawyers who are bringing themselves and their profession into disrepute," she said.

The situation could not be allowed to continue.

"The damage that incompetent and unscrupulous lawyers can inflict on their unsuspecting clients - and the potential to destabilise the court system, with resulting wasted expenditure of public money - is simply too great."

Poor lawyer practices included:

* lawyers ignorant of legal principles and not realising their own ignorance;

* "car boot lawyers" using a District Court law library phone as their office number and using interviewing rooms as their offices;

* lawyers gaming the system by delaying a plea or changing pleas part-way through the process to maximise payments - Dame Margaret said sources told her up to 80 percent of lawyers practising in Manukau District Court could be gaming the system;

* lawyers who demanded or accepted top up payments from clients who do not understand legal aid;

* widespread abuse of the preferred lawyer policy by duty solicitors, including taking backhanders for recommending particular lawyers to applicants.

Dame Margaret said the system needed to make it tougher to become a legal aid lawyer.

She recommended an accreditation system. Lawyers would have to get accredited before they could practise, and renew it every three years.

It should be subject to conditions that would ensure accountability to the provision of legal aid services.

Legal aid lawyers should also get training, supervision, peer support and feedback on their performance.

Pay and other issues also needed to be addressed.

Some clients were also abusing the system, aiming at manipulating it to their own ends, or for lawyers' financial benefit, said the report.

The system has a high number of repeat clients, accounting for about 63 percent of expenditure.

Dame Margaret recommended a case management system, where repeat clients who reach a threshold or continuously dismiss lawyers, would not be entitled to their choice of lawyer.

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"Compounding these problems is the dysfunctional relationship between the Legal Services Agency and the New Zealand Law Society," she said.

"Each blames the other for shortcomings in the legal aid, and each considers the other responsible for the quality of legal aid lawyers."

The report said the agency has not been successful in holding lawyers accountable for their performance and it struggles as a small bureaucracy outside mainstream government.

Dame Margaret said a sea change was needed to revamp the crippling system. Among 86 recommendations, she suggests the Legal Aid Agency be folded into the Ministry of Justice.

If the system cannot be rectified within three years, the government should institute an independent regulator for the legal profession, Dame Margaret said.

Justice Minister Simon Power, who initiated the review in April, said the report was deeply concerning and the Government would act swiftly to implement the structural changes suggested.

"I will be raising some of the recommendations in Cabinet on Monday to ensure we maintain certainty around the delivery of legal aid.

"We will act on the remainder of the recommendations early in the new year."

Mr Power said he was most concerned about her criticism of how the agency operated and lawyers' behaviour - it goes to centre of the integrity of the legal system and it needs urgent attention.

"When someone as experienced in providing services to the public as Dame Margaret talks about system-wide failings, a system open to abuse, and appalling behaviour, we know we have a problem."

The Law Society said it would comment once it had the opportunity to study the report fully.

8 comments
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AT   #8   09:07 pm Nov 28 2009

Good on you, Justice Minister Simon Power, and Nzers need immediate action.

chester midnight   #7   06:18 pm Nov 27 2009

You'd think that Stuff (The Dominion Post) would post a link for us to read this important report ... so here it is:

http://www.justice.govt.nz/publications/global-publications/t/transforming-the-legal-aid-system/transforming-the-legal-aid-system/at_download/file

Take time to read it, and have a great weekend.

jim   #6   04:05 pm Nov 27 2009

A lawyer with a briefcase can steal more than a thousand men with guns!!!

no justice   #5   03:19 pm Nov 27 2009

While aprt of the blame can be passed onto the lawyers most of the blame leads to as is caused by incompetent Crown law prosecutors and poor police practices. The Crown law should be making these hopelss cops accountable but dont as the Crown law (private) firms benfit by the poor practices.

A memeber of our family recently was acquiited on charges and was not able to get legal aid.

His lawyer asked for the same item more than 10 times and did not get it. this and other totally incompetent practices by the police staff caused the legal bill to be an extra $20,000. The Crown lawyer knew and did not care less and nor did the police when a complaint was laid.

V   #4   01:56 pm Nov 27 2009

If Dame Margaret Bazley hadn't been commissioned to do the the Legal Aid Review, would the Law Society have even bothered to do anything about lawyers rorting the legal aid system? I think not.

If the Law society claim they were unaware of what was going on, doesn't that makes it even worse. That makes them incompetent of detecting a rort happening right under their nose.

And how could the law society not know about it, when Dame Margaret Bazley has said "that it many cases the law fraternity was aware of what was going on, but nothing was done about it."

Oh dear Oh dear Oh dear. What can you really say?

pete   #3   01:28 pm Nov 27 2009

How come it took one of this countries great legal minds to figure out what Joe Average has know for years?

Usually the legal profession sticks together and closes ranks when anything remotely looks like interfering with the cash flow into thier exclusive country club.

Well done Dame Margret for breaking the silence and where was the judiciary when all this rort was going on?

Chey   #2   10:54 am Nov 27 2009

But legal aid is still a very valuable system and as such should be preserved. However, the offending lawyers should be severely reprimanded for abusing the system.

Alastair   #1   09:42 am Nov 27 2009

Have people only just noticed? For many years there has been a rise in cases in the family court being selfrepresented.

This is not only legal aid lawyers, it is accross the board, fully funded lawyers. Lawyers "Forgetting" to show up to court, or worse, not knowing why they are there. Not just legal aid - the whole system needs examination. Will it happen? NO! Lawyers examining lawyers to destroy their gravy trains, you have to be joking!

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