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Strange but true

01 December 2011 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 7492 / Categories: Blogs
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Dominic Regan muses over some striking legal characters & cases

The retirement has just been announced of Chris Tickle, who was the Bristol regional employment judge. Our paths first crossed years ago in a strike dismissal case involving a halal butchery in Birmingham, I acted for the claimants, he represented the employers in the tribunal. We settled in the end, but not before wicked allegations were made that, when busy, the butchers would pop round to Tesco to buy dead birds to pass off as true halal meat.

The appointment of Mr Tickle was inspired for he was at the forefront of active case management and I was in awe of what he did. His approach pre-dated Jackson by a decade. A good man, he was not to be fooled with. A standard direction he sensibly issued was to limit the number of documents in the tribunal bundle, typically to 50 pages a party. Those who foolishly ignored this explicit direction would receive a phone call from the great man: “Listen, this is me ripping pages

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Muckle LLP—Phoebe Gogarty

Muckle LLP—Phoebe Gogarty

North East firm welcomes employment specialist

Browne Jacobson—Colette Withey

Browne Jacobson—Colette Withey

Partner joins commercial and technology practice

Ellisons—Lizzy Firmin

Ellisons—Lizzy Firmin

Chief operating officer joins equity partnership

NEWS
Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB) has restated a fundamental truth, writes John Gould, chair of Russell-Cooke, in this week's NLJ: only authorised persons can conduct litigation. The decision sparked alarm, but Gould stresses it merely confirms the Legal Services Act 2007
The government’s decision to make the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) the Single Professional Services Supervisor marks a watershed in the UK’s fight against money laundering, says Rebecca Hughes of Corker Binning in this week's NLJ. The FCA will now oversee 60,000 firms across legal and accountancy sectors—a massive expansion of remit that raises questions over resources and readiness 
The High Court's decision in Parfitt v Jones [2025] EWHC 1552 (Ch) provided a striking reminder of the need to instruct the right expert in retrospective capacity assessments, says Ann Stanyer of Wedlake Bell in NLJ this week
Paige Coulter of Quinn Emanuel reports on the UK’s first statutory definition of SLAPPs under the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023in NLJ this week
In this week's NLJ, Sophie Houghton of LexisPSL distils the key lesson from recent costs cases: if you want to exceed guideline hourly rates (GHR), you must prove why
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