Carter-Ruck, the UK’s most notorious libel firm, used abusive litigation to silence criticism of a former Tory donor.
The Solicitors Regulation Authority is investigating - but Carter-Ruck just filed a judicial review. If successful, they'll have total impunity.
Thread:
The donor is Mohamed Amersi.
Former Tory MP @CharlotteLeslie wrote a private note on Amersi's activities. As @DavidDavisMP said, Amersi then "used his wealth and influence to try to bully Charlotte Leslie into silence".
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP Carter-Ruck acted for Amersi suing Ms Leslie for defamation. Carter-Ruck's approach was - in my view, and that of many others - designed to drain Ms Leslie's resources.
The High Court was extremely unimpressed.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP David Davis said the litigation was a "SLAPP" - strategic litigation against public participation. Abusive litigation intended to silence someone.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP This is the key paragraph of the High Court judgment. In my view, it backs what David Davis said:
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP Amersi appealed; the Court of Appeal wasn't interested:
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP David Davis then made a series of very serious allegations against Amersi in the House of Commons. It's protected by Parliamentary privilege - so Amersi can't sue Mr Davis.
He's been clear he'll sue anyone repeating them - and is currently suing the BBC (Carter-Ruck again)
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP Abusive litigation is what Carter-Ruck do. In fact Amersi is one of their higher quality clients.
As we reported last month, Carter-Ruck acted for one of the world's largest ever fraudsters in circumstances where Carter-Ruck must have suspected they were helping the fraud.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP There is no suggestion Amersi is a fraudster; just a bully.
I don't know if the allegations against him are true. I do think we should be able to discuss them.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP After the collapse of the Amersi litigation, Ms Leslie referred Carter-Ruck to the Solicitors Regulation Authority.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP At this point a normal firm would explain its position to the SRA.
Carter-Ruck are not a normal firm.
This is their response:
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP It's a judicial review to stop the SRA getting access to privileged documentation.
But the SRA can't possibly investigate a law firm unless it has access (unless the client agrees, which obviously Amersi won't).
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP Why are Carter-Ruck doing this?
I don't know. But I'd speculate: because they have something to hide. There's something in their client correspondence which (for example) proves that the litigation was abusive.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP But - whatever the motivation - if Carter-Ruck are successful, then the SRA will never be able to investigate a law firm when it acts abusively and unethically.
Carter-Ruck have always acted with complete impunity. They'd like that to continue.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP And so would Amersi. He threw a Twitter tantrum yesterday when The Lawyer magazine dared publish a report on the JR. Amersi appears to have forgotten that he lost, at the High Court and the Court of Appeal.
(but it's great he has two friends)
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP If I had to guess, I'd say I expect Amersi will lose the BBC litigation too. The public interest defence was intended for cases like this.
@CharlotteLeslie @DavidDavisMP But the problem is that few people would publish a report on Amersi, or anyone like him, when it means years of expensive litigation - even if sure of eventual victory.
We should change the law. And we should reign in rogue firms like Carter-Ruck.
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Lots of people say the Government should significantly cut spending. Hardly any spell out how that could be achieved.
So kudos to the Policy Exchange for a serious-minded report proposing spending cuts taking the size of the state down to where it was before the pandemic.
Key proposals:
1. freeze state pensions for three years and end triple lock 2. freeze benefits for three years 3. £20 fee for seeing a GP
4. abolishing most childcare subsidies 5. ending free school means 6. cut cost of civil service by 25%
@ChristianJMay There’s an excellent argument for repealing all VAT exemptions and special rates, and then protecting middle/low earners with tax threshold changes/benefit increases
People often ask me "why can't tax avoidance be made illegal"?
It's a good question. I recently tried quite hard to make one of the worst kinds of tax avoidance illegal. I think I got it wrong.
Thread:
Imagine it's 2010. I've just invented a tax avoidance scheme.
Sign here, pay me £10k, and I'll throw £100k in a big circle and you can claim you just made a £100k tax loss from films/real estate/R&D/whatever, which you can deduct against your income.
(THIS DOES NOT WORK)
I am, in the lingo, a "promoter". I flog the scheme all over the internet, tiktok videos etc, and find 999 other people paying me £10k each and I make an absolute fortune in fees.