back to article Newzbin barrister struck off for owning site he represented

A barrister has been struck off and fined after failing to disclose that he was the owner of a copyright-infringing website that he represented during trial - and for posting abusive Twitter messages. David Harris had represented Newzbin during part of a 2010 High Court hearing into whether the website was liable for copyright …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Truly a proven lawyer

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    "A lawyer who represents himself has a fool for a client."

    I don't know if the case would otherwise have been winnable but it's still sad if assaults on indexers (that are not google) succeed because of poor judgement by the owners.

  3. Pete 2 Silver badge

    Pop!

    > ... diminish public confidence in the legal profession

    Or demonstrate that lawyers are just ordinary people who can hide behind a wall of obscure legal (and latin) jargon.

    Most people who have ever come into contact with the legal profession; either through a house purchase, divorce, damages claim or criminal prosecution in all likelihood will already have a pretty low opinion of lawyers. Whether it's the firm that charges you parters' rates for your work and then hands it off to a junior who can't even spell. Or the conveyancer who seems to take a week to drag their heels through every single stage of an otherwise simple property purchase. Or the defence lawyer who doesn't seem to understand that YOU DIDN'T DO IT and just wants you to plead guilty, so they can have an easy life, collect their considerable fee and move on to the next victim.

    Maybe this guy didn't diminish public confidence in the legal profession. Maybe all he did was show them up to have the same failings, weaknesses and faults as everyone else - that he peeled away the thin veneer of competence and exposed them to the light of day. For a profession that relies so much on appearances and excluding "ordinary" people from their goings-on, a bit of harsh reality could really burst the bubble.

    1. Throatwobbler Mangrove

      " lawyers are just ordinary people who can hide behind a wall of obscure legal (and latin) jargon."

      Err - apparently the hiding didn't go too well in this case.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    You would think he would be happy pulling in the barrister bucks rather than dabbling in the grubby world of file sharing.

    1. JimC

      Well maybe

      Well maybe there's more money to be had from the advertising revenue on the file sharing site than there is being a mediocre lawyer?

    2. This post has been deleted by its author

    3. Gordon 10

      Myths about Barristers

      Its interesting to note that Barristers are very like salesmen in some respects - they are essentially fee & commission based - therefore their range of earning can vary considerably and also vary wildly over time. They also have huge upfront training and development costs, - its far easier to become a solictor than a barrister as solictors have a much greater chance of getting their training contract paid for.

      I would say you are better off being a mediocre solictor than a mediocre barrister.

      As a profession both will earn greater than average wage but not orders of magnitude bigger than an IT professional for example. The average London contract wage is probably a similar ball park to the average barrister wage.

  5. Mako

    I've got this silly picture in my head of a barrister cross-examining himself, sprinting back and forth between the witness box and the defence table. Alternately whipping off his wig and then plonking it back on again as the location merits.

    1. TeeCee Gold badge
      Happy

      "...a barrister cross-examining himself....."

      Ah, opportunity for a new euphamism there methinks.

      1. david wilson

        >>""...a barrister cross-examining himself....."

        >>"Ah, opportunity for a new euphamism there methinks.

        Well, as euphemisms go, it's a less disturbing mental image than one barrister cross-examining another one, or a pair cross-examining each other.

  6. Frank Bitterlich
    Go

    Yay! A society without lawyers...!

    So if "[engaging] in conduct whether in pursuit of his profession or otherwise which is ... likely to diminish public confidence in the legal profession" is prohibited, I expect about 99.9 % of the members of that profession to step down and find themselves other jobs.

    Thanks for clearing that up.

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    ' Harris....in one case referred to legal representatives for the film studios – which had brought the case against Newzbin – as "slimebags" '

    And the issue is?

    1. Frank 2
      Pint

      The issue is

      the word is slimeballs?

  8. Loyal Commenter Silver badge
    Paris Hilton

    Shirley

    If he told the judge he didn;t know whether he had any financial interest in the company, which he owned, then that is perjury and he should be sent down for it?

    1. Field Marshal Von Krakenfart
      Paris Hilton

      Good question, when a solicitor or a barrister is in court are they considered to be under oath. But then people speaking before the court also have privilege, i.e. if you make derogatory statements about somebody when giving evidence it's not slander (I think).

      Paris, 'cos she's been sent down a few times.

  9. mark 63 Silver badge

    i dont see the problem

    I thought one was allowed to represent oneself

  10. Neil 38
    FAIL

    From what I remember the case was based around the owners of the site knowing that illegal file sharing was happening and a lot of this rested on forum posts by the site admins and other specific tags which were only appropriate to copyrighted material.

    Considering the company behind the site was actually owned by a lawyer you'd think they would have known how to protect themselves a little better.

  11. Field Marshal Von Krakenfart
    Trollface

    "The code also prohibits barristers from "[engaging] in conduct whether in pursuit of his profession or otherwise which is ... likely to diminish public confidence in the legal profession or the administration of justice or otherwise bring the legal profession into disrepute".

    That would include breathing.

  12. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    H4242

  13. Al Jones

    duty to the Court

    If a barrister has "an overriding duty to the Court to act with independence in the interests of justice", can he also have a duty to defend his client?

    1. beerandbiscuits

      Yes

      His job is to represent his client's interests. The duty to the court covers things like putting forward a case which the barrister knows to be untrue. If you as his client say "I did it but I instruct you to say I didn't" the barrister would be embarrassed because if he continued he would have to breach either his duty to the court or his duty to the client. He would then have to stop acting for you.

      Had he turned up at court and said "I am the man who owns Newsbin" he would have been fine. It was the deception that was the problem - you can't claim to be an independent representative with duties to the court when you are actually acting in your own interests.

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