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Exeter Uni students boss this year’s Clifford Chance ‘CV Blind’ competition

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Exclusive: Students from Russell Group institution net 20% of vac scheme places awarded through scheme, but overall winner is from LSE

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Students from Exeter University have bagged four out of the 20 vac scheme places awarded by Clifford Chance as part of its 2015 ‘Intelligent Aid’ competition — in which applicants’ educational backgrounds are not disclosed during the assessment process.

However, the overall winner of the competition — dubbed ‘CV Blind’ — was from LSE. Alongside scooping a vac scheme, LSE third year Farah Rohaizat (pictured below, centre) gets £5,000 to help her through uni after being identified as the standout performer.

The other victors were a mixture of law and non-law students from Cambridge, Exeter, Kent, Oxford, Oxford Brookes, SOAS, Southampton, Sussex, East Anglia, Warwick and BPP.

CC-winners

The students emerged from a field of over a hundred applicants who submitted 500 word essays on this year’s topic, the Rule of Law. Those hopefuls were then whittled down to a group of 40 candidates who were invited to a two-day assessment centre at the magic circle giant’s Canary Wharf headquarters earlier this month.

The 20 who emerged victorious were judged purely on their performance on the day, with none of the assessors knowing their grades or where they went to university. But from this point on they will be treated like any other wannabe, with their CVs considered as they complete their summer vac schemes and undertake interviews with the firms’ partners to determine whether they’ll be offered training contracts.

Last year’s Intelligent Aid competition also saw a strong showing from Exeter, with three students among the winning 20, including the overall winner, Jessica Bryant, who went on to secure a training contract at Clifford Chance to commence in 2016.

Bryant, who bagged a first in her philosophy and politics degree, would in all likelihood have got herself a training contract via the traditional route. But the competition — which has been running since 2011 — has worked for underdogs too, with, for example, Bath Spa graduate David Boyd shaking things up when he came through it to secure a TC in 2012.

The post Exeter Uni students boss this year’s Clifford Chance ‘CV Blind’ competition appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Striking again — court defeat over legal aid cuts could see barristers back on picket line

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Judges back government plans for massive cuts in number of legal aid law firms, reigniting fears that law students wanting a career in crime … will have to rob banks

barristers

The prospect looms again of barristers donning donkey jackets and warming hands over braziers in the shadow of the Houses of Parliament — as the Court of Appeal this morning shot down a judicial review of government plans to slash legal aid contracts for law firms.

In the aftermath of this morning’s ruling, the Criminal Bar Association (CBA) announced it would immediately consult its members on future potential action.

But striking and marching could well not be enough to convince law students and recently qualified lawyers that anything resembling healthy career prospects exists in the legal aid field.

Indeed, the issue of whether in five years’ time there will even be enough lawyers at the criminal bar to form a meaningful picket line is becoming ever more relevant.

However, for the time being, lawyers appear motivated to fight through the tactic of more public protests — arguably because they are running out of options fast.

“Firms are already merging or going out of business,” pointed out Catherine Baksi, a journalist and prominent Twitter commentator specialising in the legal aid sector, adding:

“Most of those that don’t get one of the 527 police station contracts won’t be able to survive on own-client work alone for long.”

Baksi forecast to Legal Cheek today that “if the scheme goes ahead, the result will be the formation of cartels that will ultimately put power into the hands of the remaining giant suppliers. The model will be a disaster for the bar as well. Barristers will see instructions diminish as solicitors’ firms — seeking to profit from economies of scale — hold on to work and give it to their own in-house advocates.”

The CBA and several criminal law specialist and legal aid solicitor groups last year staged a round of go-slows and other action. Barristers were much more eager to describe the protests as strikes, while solicitors danced round the issue, not wanting to be seen to be breaching their contractual duties to the Legal Aid Agency.

Barristers also launched a highly effective “no returns” policy in relation to briefs. And the combined result of the various protest measures nearly brought the criminal courts to a halt.

But the lawyer groups then switched tactics, launching a series of judicial reviews of the Ministry of Justice’s decision-making processes behind the legal aid reforms.

Now, in relation to this crucial reform of how many law firms will be authorised to take publicly funded criminal cases, the judicial review route appears close to exhaustion.

The CBA issued a statement earlier today saying:

“The introduction of two tier contracts, with the likely loss of over 1,000 firms, will cause irreversible damage to our criminal justice system. The wider ramifications of this damage should be a matter of concern for every sector of society. We await the decision as to whether the claimants intend to seek to petition the Supreme Court to reverse the decision of the Court of Appeal.”

Those front line claimants in this — one of several judicial reviews the government has faced in relation to its package of legal aid reforms — were the Criminal Law Solicitors Association, the London Criminal Courts Solicitors Association (LCCSA) and the Law Society of England and Wales.

Commenting on the ruling, LCCSA president Jonathan Black, said bluntly:

“We’re gutted. It’s another terrible blow for our criminal justice system and access to justice. Whilst the appeal court has found the devastating carve-up of solicitor representation is technically legal, we, and many others believe it’s immoral. We’ll do everything we can to continue the fight.”

Black, a partner at London Gray’s Inn Road firm BSB Solicitors, continued:

“We’re staring into an abyss of rough justice. The message sent by these swingeing ideological cuts and policies, coming on top of many other draconian measures, is simple. Don’t be poor, don’t be a victim of domestic abuse and don’t be accused of a crime. Because woe betide you, the state isn’t interested in providing you with the protection of the law. Ministerial assurances that legal aid will be there for anyone who needs it ring hollow.”

Whether the legal profession can remain unified in its last ditch battle with the Ministry of Justice also remains an issue.

During the last round of protests more than a year ago, the Law Society came to blows with criminal law solicitors, with the latter maintaining that Chancery Lane had run scared of offending Justice Secretary Chris Grayling. That row ended with the society’s leadership losing a vote of confidence at a Law Society special general meeting.

Then a year ago the CBA infuriated many solicitors and junior barristers by apparently cutting a deal with the ministry to postpone cuts to fees paid to advocates in Crown Court cases under the advocates graduated fee scheme.

The post Striking again — court defeat over legal aid cuts could see barristers back on picket line appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Revealed: How law schools’ websites looked at the dawn of the millennium

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Throwback Thursday: A journey back in time through the World Wide Web — law school edition

Cambridge — 1997

So bad it’s good

Cambridge

BPP — 2000

Stock image heaven

BPP

Nottingham — 1999

Bleak

Nottingham

Queen Mary — 1998

Early-phase east London hipster

queenmary

Newcastle — 1997

Spacing issues

Newcastle

Manchester — 1997

50 shades of purple

Manchester

Oxford — 1999

Looks like an unaccredited degree mill, but is actually the genuine article

Oxford

College of Law — 2001

Pre-university status

TheCollegeofLaw

Bristol — 1999

Essay-style

Bristol

King’s College — 1997

More paupers than kings

Kings

Previously:

Revealed: How big law firms’ websites looked in the 90s [Legal Cheek]

The post Revealed: How law schools’ websites looked at the dawn of the millennium appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Pinsent Masons retains 79% of qualifying trainees

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Latest City firm to put qualifying young bloods out of their misery is keeping 15 of its spring 2015 round

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City-based global law firm Pinsent Masons — which takes on 75 trainees a year — has offered posts to 15 newly qualifying (NQ) solicitors this spring. Sixteen of 19 trainees applied for permanent roles at the practice. According to the firm, all received offers, but one declined.

The firm — which offers London NQs starting salaries of £60,000 — generally keeps between 70% and 85% of its qualifying trainees. The announcement marks a slight drop from its 2014 spring retention figure of 82%.

Pinsent

Earlier this month the London office of global giant Baker & McKenzie announced it was keeping 14 of 17 (82%) of its spring qualifiers, while national firm Nabarro hit 100%.

Firm profile: Pinsent Masons [Legal Cheek]

The post Pinsent Masons retains 79% of qualifying trainees appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Saul Goodman-style mavericks vs straight-A golden children: who will be the advocates of the future?

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Debt-burdened wannabe litigators could yet exert influence on direction of grades-obsessed profession through new routes like the paralegal shortcut

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Up until the financial crisis some students with pretty mediocre CVs made it into the elite end of the legal profession. With pupillages and training contracts more plentiful — graduate law places have dropped by between 20-30% since 2008 — many firms and chambers tended to hire annually a handful of charismatic wildcards without the most impressive educational backgrounds.

Sometimes they thrived, other times not so much — but most would agree that the profession was richer for it, especially when it came to the quixotic field of advocacy, where a little spark can go a long way.

These days, though, in a squeezed and increasingly competitive legal market, the luxury of the Saul Goodman-style maverick trainee or pupil is rarely allowed. Even at the criminal bar — where law’s more weird and wonderful characters have traditionally found a home — the penchant for flair has dimmed as cash-strapped chambers opt for earnest grafters who have demonstrated their commitment by slogging it out for years as paralegals.

Is it over for the rough diamonds?

Mukul Chawla QC, who leads criminal set 9-12 Bell Yard, avoided answering this question directly at Legal Cheek Careers at Gray’s Inn on Tuesday evening, but his response wasn’t good news for anyone with a ‘B’ on their CV.

“We have two pupil slots a year. We had 350 applicants last year. Most are pretty good. Some are clearly outstanding,” he said.

Chawla’s fellow panellist, BPP Law School’s joint director of the Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC), James Welsh, who is also a criminal barrister at 9 Bedford Row, has an interesting theory on the matter.

“The removal of unfunded pupillages took away the opportunity for lots of sets to take on the wildcard. But I do see with the less conventional people who we feed through to the bar that chambers are pretty good at trying to give them a passage in.”

Of course, some people have it all. And for these characters with a combination of brains, charm and polish at an early age, life remains sweet. They may end up at top law firms, like Herbert Smith Freehills arbitrator Matthew Weiniger QC, who rose to silk last year as a solicitor. Or they may find a home at leading chambers, which is the route Essex Court Chambers commercial barrister Claire Blanchard QC has taken. They may even jump between both worlds, as Hardwicke commercial barrister Charles Raffin has done, beginning at the bar, before spending three years at the London office of US law firm Skadden and then subsequently moving back to the bar.

All three told students about their experiences on the Legal Cheek panel at Gray’s Inn. The bottom line: getting into law via their route is incredibly competitive, but can be done — and these days depends less on what university you went to than the grades you obtained when you got there and how you come across at interview. Blanchard, who heads her set’s pupillage committee, got her undergraduate degree from Liverpool Polytechnic and is determined to widen access to the bar.

“The present situation is largely self perpetuating,” she said. “Students who didn’t go to Oxbridge are repeatedly and wrongly advised to not apply to a set like ours. We can’t recruit you if you don’t apply.”

Weiniger’s firm, Herbert Smith Freehills, meanwhile, is currently looking to extend its reach from the 35 campuses where it is currently active as it bids to hire more widely, although continues to be stringent on academics and gauging wannabes’ suitability. Commercial awareness is key, Weiniger (pictured below) emphasised to the audience:

“The way to stand out when applying to a corporate law firm is your commercial analysis. There is barely a story in the newspaper without a financial story underneath it. From celebrity news, to politics to tax and even crime. There are financial implications and stakeholders. The really good applicants understand where the stakeholders are and where the money is moving … and can summarise this in a concise manner.”

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Raffin’s chambers, Hardwicke, also seeks to bring in candidates who have ploughed furrows outside the ordinary, hence his recruitment from Skadden and the set’s hiring of a former Evening Standard journalist among a number of non-Oxbridge recent pupils.

“Don’t be put off if you haven’t gone to one of the established institutions. If someone has got that spark and the skills, and is able to demonstrate evidence of those skills, such as through pro bono or other life experience, then they should apply,” said Raffin (pictured below).

raffin

While a handful make it into these top firms and chambers at graduate level, another group manage to stumble in via more circuitous routes. Solicitors who train at smaller firms have been known to get into much bigger ones amid an uptick in work in a particular practice area, although these days vacant positions are often filled from abroad, particularly in the highly international world of arbitration in which Weiniger has carved his niche. But these global links can work in wannabes’ favour, with Weiniger recommending that young solicitors seek out positions in the less desirable locations in global law firms’ sprawling networks as a way into plum jobs in London.

Raffin, meanwhile, spoke about how the “fantastic experience of working on the other side of the fence” in a law firm had held him in good stead for his return to the bar. And Welsh (pictured below) reflected on the potential of more obscure sets at the regional bar as a place for barristers to build a name.

“Having practised in London and outside, one difference you notice on circuit is that solicitors tend to pick solicitors rather than the sets they’re in. So it means that if you are personally very good that word will spread around circuit more rapidly than in London,” he said.

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Still, many graduates remain without training contracts or pupillages. And as these numbers grow — training contract numbers sunk again last year to 5,097, which is way off the 2007-08 high of 6,303, while pupillage numbers have plunged from 550 to around 400 — perhaps something more radical is called for?

Already, there are discussions about merging the Legal Practice Course (LPC) and BPTC to create fused vocational training from where all graduates would have to go on to practise as solicitors, only being eligible to become barristers at a later stage. This idea, when combined with the new “paralegal shortcut” that allows LPC graduates to qualify without doing a training contract, would at least cut the vast number of paralegals.

But the panellists on the whole weren’t enthused, with Chawla and Welsh expressing doubts about the wisdom of forcing wannabe transactional lawyers to do advocacy modules at law school, and Blanchard seeing no reason to remove the direct route to the bar.

There was even less love from the quintet of top lawyers for an idea to re-purpose the Inns of Court to their original function of providing accommodation so that they could then house law graduates rent-free to do low-paid but important legal aid advocacy work.

“I love your idealism but it won’t work,” said Chawla.

With the audience of 90 students at Gray’s Inn outnumbering the panellists 18 to one, they could of course have seized the building there and then. Just as the tens of thousands of law students, paralegals and junior lawyers could attempt to start their own movement to challenge the handful of baby boomers who run this country’s legal establishment.

But are rookie lawyers of sufficiently revolutionary character to redefine the profession? We’ll see.

The post Saul Goodman-style mavericks vs straight-A golden children: who will be the advocates of the future? appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Google Street View shatters law firm’s delusions of grandeur

CMS Cameron McKenna waves good-bye to 38% of spring NQs

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CMS Cameron McKenna has kept just 16 of its 26 spring newly-qualified cohort, posting a comparatively woeful retention rate of 62%

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The English branch of mega-global franchised law firm CMS takes on 80 trainees each year. However only 16 of its 26 qualifying lawyers this spring will be staying with the firm. The NQs will be split between the firm’s London and Bristol offices, with 14 in the City of London and the remaining two based out west.

CMS

The 16 will be spread across several of the firm’s departments including commercial regulatory and disputes, banking and international finance, real estate and tax.

The announcement marks the third consecutive retention rate drop for the firm; it previously posted 78% in spring 2014 and 65% last Autumn. However CMS had an inflated number of trainees this time last year following its merger with Scotland’s Dundas & Wilson.

Senior partner Penelope Warne explained:

“Our wish is to offer positions to as many trainees as possible. Although offers were made in the region of 80%, on this occasion a number of trainees decided to take positions in-house or outside the practice of law which meant that take-up was uncharacteristically low.”

The development follows yesterday’s announcement that Pinsent Masons is to keep 79% of its spring NQs. Earlier this month, the London office of global giant Baker & McKenzie announced it was keeping 14 of 17 (82%) of its spring qualifiers, while London-based international firm Nabarro hit 100%.

Firm profile: CMS Cameron McKenna [Legal Cheek]

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University of Law beats rivals to bag first teaching law firm licence

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Nottingham left to lick its wounds as the country’s biggest law school is awarded alternative business structure status

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Europe’s biggest law school has stolen a march on its English competition in the race to become the first academic law firm.

The University of Law — which is currently home to a student body of some 17,000 — has bagged an alternative business structure licence from the solicitors’ profession regulator.

That means that the law school that produced many of the legal profession great and good — from Cherie Blair to current shadow Lord Chancellor Sadiq Khan — can now ask its students to dole cheap and cheerful advice through a variety of pro bono programmes with the additional oomph of being a fully-accredited law firm.

According to the university, the licence will allow the institution to expand its legal advice clinic, from which trainee solicitors — under the supervision of qualified lawyers — offer pro-bono advice to the public in various areas of social welfare law.

The move will have officials at rivals Nottingham Law School feeling sick as parrots. Less than a fortnight ago, Nottingham Trent University trumpeted its bid to become the first teaching law school, but that application is still pending with the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA).

According to the SRA’s ABS register, the University of Law is now licensed to undertake rights of audience, conduct of litigation, reserved instrument activities and administration of oaths.

Indeed, swearing oaths can go for about a tenner a pop, which could mean a healthy ale kitty for the law students camped out in the union bar.

ULaw chief executive and president John Latham commented on the award of the licence:

“Being the first University to be granted an ABS status means that we can provide trainees and our law firm and in-house clients with a market-leading proposition that will equip the trainees for the legal and commercial challenges they will face in today’s workplace.

“Being able to provide practical experiences in a client-facing environment is a fundamental part of the training needed for aspiring solicitors. Our legal advice clinic enables us to offer a pivotal service and sets us apart from other legal training providers and underlines our continuing commitment to give our trainees a distinct advantage that helps them stand out from the crowd in the competitive legal market.”

Previously:

Nottingham Law School in bid to become first ever ‘teaching law firm’ [Legal Cheek]

The post University of Law beats rivals to bag first teaching law firm licence appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Law firms run Oxbridge recruitment targets as high as 50% of trainees, says diversity chief

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A senior Law Society figure claims unofficial bias in favour of elitism remains rife among City and large commercial firms

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Many City law firms unofficially insist that up to half their trainees are recruited from Oxbridge, a leading diversity campaigner has claimed.

Solicitor Caroline Newman — the chairwoman of the Law Society’s recently launched ethnic minority lawyers division — told Legal Cheek that many of the large commercial practices remain resistant to widening their recruitment pools.

As a former Square Mile lawyer herself, Newman claims to speak from personal experience.

Newman said that when she qualified in the late 1990s at what was then City practice SJ Berwin, a senior staff member conceded that the firm’s hierarchy insisted that 40% of recruits must be drawn from those two most ancient of universities.

“There was an unofficial quota that stipulated 40% of the trainees would come from Oxbridge,” related Newman. “I was told that by the human resources department, which said that the message had been passed down by the senior partners.”

Newman (pictured below) went on to suggest that not only does that bias persist to this day across the spectrum of commercial law firms, it was in some cases worse.

“I understand that similar quotas are in place at other City firms — indeed, in some cases the percentage is higher. It is not by accident that they end up with so many Oxbridge recruits.”

Newman — who is also a former Law Society council member — left private practice several years ago. She now runs the London-based legal sector training and coaching business, Lawdacity.

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The lawyer also told Legal Cheek of her personal diversity horror story. Having qualified at SJ Berwin — which is now the Sino-Australian-Anglo international giant King & Wood Mallesons — Newman practised in the firm’s corporate department, advising a range of blue chip clients. At the time, she was one of only two black lawyers at the firm.

“I was walking down the corridor one day, minding my own business,” she recalled to Legal Cheek, “and one of the very senior partners approached me and said: ‘Why are you here? You’re a bit of a black sheep around this place. You don’t belong here.’”

Bearing in mind the incident happened at the turn of the 21st and not the 20th century, Newman was understandably shocked.

“I felt like someone had put a dagger in my heart,’ she said “Being only one of two black people in a sea of white faces, you are already in a place where you feel alien. You wonder about the future — could you possibly be on the partnership track? There’s all the other politics going on among the associates — who’s getting good quality work? Who’s staying and who might be going?

“And in the mix of all that I was black and female — and an older qualifier as well. So to have a partner say that — it really was like a dagger in my heart.”

Newman said that day changed her legal career.

“I had a chat with my friends, and many encouraged me to report the incident officially and potentially to sue. I thought carefully about it. In that sort of environment you’ve got to think about your future career — you don’t want to be blacklisted.”

But instead of initiating a discrimination action, Newman raised the issue at her appraisal.

“Quite a few of the senior partners turned up and the head of HR was there to deal with it. Their line was that the partner that had made the comment didn’t mean it, it was just his way, it was a joke. The usual.”

Instead of falling out with a firm that she otherwise enjoyed working for, Newman encouraged the senior partners to introduce a diversity policy. “It was very much ahead of the game in the early 2000s, and ultimately, the head of HR was grateful for my help.”

Stephen Kon, the current senior partner at King & Wood Mallesons, explained the measures the firm has taken since:

“Discrimination has never been accepted by the firm. We appointed Caroline to drive the diversity agenda of the firm in recognition that having a diverse culture was, and remains, the right thing for our business.

“As a firm we are culturally very diverse, and have proactively driven the diversity and inclusion agenda over the past decade. For example 25% of our board is female and we are actively involved in all the major diversity forums and initiatives including Stonewall Diversity Champions, InterLaw Firm Disability Forum, Law Society Diversity Forum, PRIME, Brokerage Citylink and Interlaw Diversity Forum.

“We believe our clients benefit from the rich diversity of our business, both across Europe and the Middle East, and across our Chinese, Hong Kong and Australian practices. Our diversity and inclusion manager works with the partnership to ensure our workplace is inclusive to all and completely free of any discrimination.”

Reacting to allegations that his firm and others in the City retain a bias towards Oxbridge in trainee recruitment, Kon said:

“Our only policy is to recruit the very best talent, irrespective of university or background. Each application is reviewed on its own merits. To give an example, the 62 candidates joining us on vacation scheme this year represent 27 universities between them and 30% of the candidates are from a BME background.”

Newman herself is clearly unafraid of a challenge. Her route to a training contract was itself unconventional. Having bagged a law degree from Westminster University and an LLM from the LSE, she went on to a Legal Practice Course place at the Store Street branch of the then College of Law.

She was also at the time a trustee of the Howard League for Penal Reform.

“One of our projects was to invite the great and the good to Wormwood Scrubs to eat with the prisoners,” she recalled. “They all arrived in limos with their drivers.”

One of that glittering crowd was Greg Dyke, who was then chief executive of Pearson Television, which was based in Tottenham Court Road, just a stone’s throw from the college.

“I spotted Dyke as we were leaving the prison, asked for a lift and jumped into his huge car. I told him I was a law student and he asked what type of law I wanted to do. I said media law — because he was in the media. I didn’t know anything about media law. If Dyke had been involved in property, I would have said property law. I just wanted to qualify.

“By the time I’d finished chewing his ear when he dropped me off he gave me the contact details of his head of legal. He said she would help me out with possible training contract referrals. And they are not stupid — they wouldn’t put forward a two-legged donkey, because that wouldn’t reflect well on them.”

Newman contacted Pearson’s general counsel, who arranged three interviews at law firms instructed at the time by the company, including SJ Berwin.

“I was offered training contracts at all three. When I was at law school friends used to say to me you’re black, you’re female, you’re older than 25 — there’s no way you’ll ever get a training contract in the City. But whenever anyone tells me that I can’t do something, I just say watch me.”

And that is Newman’s wider message to law students and young ethnic minority lawyers. “Wherever there is a sliver of an opportunity, take it. I didn’t know where that conversation with Greg Dyke was going to lead, but I had the courage and gumption to go for it.”

However, Newman is not so naïve as to assume that gumption alone is going to create greater diversity in the legal profession.

“You need mentors — indeed, you need more than mentors, you need sponsors — people at City law firms actively pulling for ethnic minority lawyers.”

Caroline Newman will be speaking at the Ethnic Minority Lawyers Division evening seminar at the Law Society on the evening of Wednesday 29 April.

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Clifford Chance lawyers prepare to swap their suits for hoodies that are colour-coded by rank

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No, it’s not 1 April yet — this is legit

desgin

Clifford Chance is arranging for a new colour-coded hoodie design to be rolled out to its lawyers after a fashion student wowed the firm with her designs.

Kingston University masters student Marjade Roniet finished first place in the magic circle giant’s ‘More than a hoodie’ competition on Friday, which saw young designers invited to submit drawings of hooded tops to be worn by the firm’s lawyers of the future.

But so impressed were the Clifford Chance big wigs that, in what the firm terms “an unforeseen but very exciting development”, it has been decided to use Roniet’s design to create a new line of merchandise that will be available “firm-wide”.

Roniet’s entry (pictured above and below) focuses on wannabe solicitors. Playing to the legal profession’s love of hierarchy it clads them in different colours according to the stage they are at “in order to foster a community spirit”.

Those on Clifford Chance’s first year springboard scheme wear grey, vac schemers wear blue and — in a move that may be frowned upon by diversity experts — Intelligent Aid (AKA ‘CV Blind’) scheme participants are also separately marked out, wearing burgundy. Meanwhile, if you’re lucky enough to bag a training contract with the firm then you’re awarded the illusive black hoodie — presumably to emphasise your legal ninja credentials.

Cliffordchance

Legal Cheek wonders if a similar colour system will apply to qualified lawyers, with partners perhaps wearing a regal purple shade, associates a dynamic racing green and trainees a high-vis luminous yellow so that they can be immediately clocked for urgent photocopying duties.

However, when we contacted Clifford Chance yesterday a spokesperson declined to provide any additional details to those which have been outlined on the firm’s Facebook page.

What we do know is that Roniet’s design comes in two styles. The “Diffusion” option will no doubt raise a few eyebrows among the more conservative types at Clifford Chance, with its trendy diagonal zip and roll-neck combination arguably more Star Trek than star lawyer. Fortunately, “Off The Shelf” provides a more traditional alternative.

A total of nine designs were showcased during the original ‘More than a hoodie’ fashion show, which took place at Clifford Chance’s Canary Wharf headquarters earlier this month, kicking off the competition. Votes taken on the day alongside an additional Facebook poll resulted in Roniet’s hoodie being designated as the winner on Friday.

In second place was a hipster-esque design (pictured below) by Nikki Diep. The designer, who studies at London’s University of the Arts, describes it as “modern silhouettes with a twist of high-end design details.” Or for the less fashion conscious of you out there, Diep has used cubes to spell the firm’s initials. Still, it’s quite stylish.

The firm will also turn Diep’s work into a real-life creation, with versions to be distributed to future Clifford Chance trainees and vacation scheme students next year.

cc-design1

The other six designs can be viewed on Clifford Chance’s Facebook page.

The post Clifford Chance lawyers prepare to swap their suits for hoodies that are colour-coded by rank appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Access to Freshfields’ new Manchester office is through a shopping centre

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Lawyers at esteemed magic circle firm will be able to grab fast-food and trainers en route to work

poundworld

Since last month magic circle powerhouse Freshfields has been on the hunt for offices in Manchester. The new location will provide a home for junior lawyers charged with handling “repetitive legal work”.

It now appears that the firm has settled on a temporary base as bleak as the tasks staff will be carrying out.

Freshfields’ likely new gaffe, Arndale House (pictured below), is a 23 story concrete eyesore that has been part of the Manchester skyline since the 1970s. Somewhat bizarrely, it is only accessible on foot through the Arndale shopping centre, in which it sits at the heart.

spec

According to The Lawyer, Freshfields are in talks to sign a short-term lease which would see the firm take up 40,000 square feet of the building while it negotiates rental fees on a more befitting home due for completion in 2016.

Certainly Arndale House makes a sharp contrast from the plush surroundings of the magic circle firm’s Fleet Street offices. In London, Freshies’ lawyers pass through a delightful courtyard (pictured below left) on their way to work; in Manchester they will enter the building through one of two entrances (pictured below right) used by almost 41 million shoppers each year.

arndale

Europe’s third largest city-based shopping centre — which was substantially redeveloped after the 1996 IRA bombings — includes stores such Aldi, Sports Direct and Poundworld.

Doubtless Freshfields’ lawyers will take full advantage of the amenities on offer and treat clients to a half chicken and chips at the Nandos, just a stone’s throw away in the Arndale Centre food-hall.

Map

Freshfields’ move to Manchester is part of the “northshoring” trend to the city that is being led by Berwin Leighton Paisner (BLP), Nabarro and Latham Watkins.

BLP and Nabarro made the leap north last year — the former into premises in the city’s King Street and the latter into the swish Spinningfields development — with US giant Latham & Watkins announcing similar plans earlier this year.

The post Access to Freshfields’ new Manchester office is through a shopping centre appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Lawyer left red-faced in Facebook advert typo

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Today’s *face palm* award goes to a US lawyer in Maryland — but, hands up, it could happen to any of us …

baltimore

US criminal defence lawyer John Turnbull III’s venture into Facebook advertising hasn’t gone well.

And before we go any further, our own mea culpa. Anyone in the writing business can make a balls up, as Legal Cheek‘s readers kindly and consistently point out to the editing team.

However, when a lawyer is diving into the murky world of online advertising, it is perhaps best to splurge a spot of cash on a proofreader — or ask a your secretary, friend, mum to cast an eye over the copy before, in this instance, pressing the publish button.

The “primary attorney” at Baltimore-based The Law Offices of John Grason Turnbull III has dropped a major social media clanger, omitting a key piece of information from his sponsored Facebook advertisement.

Of course, the Maryland city was the setting for cult television drugs and rozzers drama, The Wire, so you never know. But the actual story seems to be that the attorney — who specialises in criminal defence, personal injury, and workers’ compensation — simply failed to mention he was actually a lawyer on his social media ad. Opting instead for:

“Let Baltimore criminal John Grason Turnbull III fight to protect your rights.”

Turnbull presumably hoped the mistake would go unnoticed. But unfortunately for him, it was spotted by our friends over at US legal news website Above the Law. Still, at least the advert was noticed.

The post Lawyer left red-faced in Facebook advert typo appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Newly-qualified retention latest: Simmons clocks up 80%

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City firm hangs on to 12 of 15 freshly minted solicitors — and places one in house

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Simmons & Simmons is the latest City law firm to win or break hearts with the announcement of how many qualifying solicitors it is keeping on — in this case 12 of 15, or 80%.

According to the firm, there were actually no broken hearts with this spring’s cohort; two of the three not staying with the firm decided to pursue other opportunities, while the third was placed with an in-house legal department.

The most recent round marketed a significant improvement for the firm. A year ago, it retained only 54% of newly qualified lawyers, rising to 71% last autumn.

Simmons

A week ago, Pinsent Masons announced it had retained 79% of NQs this spring.

The post Newly-qualified retention latest: Simmons clocks up 80% appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Judges give Grayling a special birthday present — another High Court defeat

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Justice Secretary gets slapped down again, this time over prisoner transfer reforms – but happy b-day, nonetheless, Chris

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This is not an April Fools’ parody — although it might feel like a cruel joke to many lawyers.

Today is Chris Grayling’s birthday — and he had a jolly present from the High Court bench.

The boyish looking former television producer turned Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, clocked up 53 years on the day when he lost yet another court battle over further legal reforms.

This time the High Court branded as unlawful the Ministry of Justice’s recently imposed policy of excluding prisoners from being transferred from closed prisons to more lenient open conditions if they have a history of absconding.

According to the Press Association, two senior judges held that excluding transfers — save in exceptional circumstances – for those prisoners is inconsistent with the ministry’s own directions to the Parole Board.

Those long-standing directions state that “a phased release” from closed to open prison is necessary for most inmates serving indeterminate sentences “in order to test the prisoner’s readiness for release into the community”.

The ruling has triggered the usual Twitter uproar over Grayling’s suitability to retain such a high post in government, regardless of how old he is.

Asked blogger Jack of Kent:

But if experience is anything to go by, lawyer objections and outrage will make next to no impact on the first non-lawyer Lord Chancellor, who seems impervious to the opinions of those who did bother to qualify

All of which means the only hope his opponents have will be that come 8 May, Grayling’s Conservative Party will either be out of government following the general election, or he’ll be reshuffled.

Read the judgement if full below:

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The lamps went out all over legal London today

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Power cut brings chaos to lawyer-land, but several brave souls manage to get down the pub

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Lawyer implacability was superbly highlighted on Twitter this afternoon, as an electrical fire in London’s legal heartland forced the evacuation of thousands of offices workers.

This image of lawyers stoically enduring the evacuation while supping several glasses of plonk at renowned legal watering hole Daly’s Wine Bar was leading the way on the social media site.

The criminal law specialist tweeter focused on the “screaming hysteria”, clearly evidenced by the fact that the drinkers all remained on their feet.

It is thought that the offices of both the Law Society and the Bar Council were affected as neither returned calls. (However, some speculated that was simply business as usual for the two professional bodies.)

Meanwhile, the London Fire Brigade reported that crews rushed to an electrical fire among cables under the pavement on Kingsway in Holborn.

The alarm was raised after smoke was seen coming out of an inspection cover on the pavement, resulting in more than 2,000 workers being evacuated from nearby buildings owing to billowing bursts of thick black smoke.

Six fire engines and 35 fire-fighters and officers piled in to save the lawyers … and others.

The post The lamps went out all over legal London today appeared first on Legal Cheek.


Global law firm apologises for April Fool promising better work-life balance

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Associates at Weil Gotshal’s offices around the world are fuming at ham-fisted bid by the senior partnership to take the piss out of work-life balance issues

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Law firms talk a lot of rubbish about “work-life balance”. They make all the right noises about caring for the mental and physical health of their lawyers and staff — and then bollock young associates if they are a nanosecond off their annual billing target of three million hours.

But for a moment yesterday, it looked as though one global firm had gone straight to the head of the class in putting health above profit — but in reality all it has managed to do is intensely irritate its worker-bee lawyers with a misguided and naff April Fools’ joke.

New York-based Weil Gotshal issued a global all-staff notice yesterday — including to solicitors in its London office — saying that the firm’s Grand Poobahs had decided to ease up on the unwritten rule that lawyers had to keep one eye glued to their email inbox 24 hours a day.

“Effective May 1, 2015,” wrote Lisa Cuevas (pictured below), who travels under the bizarre job title of “chief talent officer” at Weil, “the following rules will be in effect, implemented by software in each office.”

Weil

Cuevas then went on to list a string of new email protocols, the gist of which was that no correspondence would be sent to lawyers between 11 o’clock in the evening and 6 o’clock in the morning.

Not a huge concession — but at least something. Indeed, the talent guvnor herself acknowledged that the decision, while motivated by similar moves such as that of German motorcar manufacturer Dailmer, did not go as far as the slack being cut by bosses at some European companies.

Nonetheless, in the dog-eat-dog world of international transactional legal business — where every minute counts and some law firms have issued check-your-email-often (ie, always) edicts — it seemed like at least a welcome sop.

Except it was a cruel joke — and one that has, according to our good friends across the pond, Above the Law, backfired rather badly on Cuevas and the Weil senior partnership.

Messages from associates to the website included these notes of harsh criticism and outright anger:

“Please get ahold of Weil’s April fools email. It’s awful and associates are pissed.”

“If this is true, it’s awesome. If it’s a joke, it’s the worst joke of all time. Especially to someone like me who has been billing 12-16 hour days recently and gets a lot of late night and weekend emails.”

“This is a f*cked-up joke.”

“April Fools! We don’t really give a shit about you! Now get back to billing.”

Those comments seem to have struck a chord. Yesterday afternoon, Barry Wolf, the firm’s executive partner (now there’s a job title that at least makes some degree of sense) sent a firm-wide email that was grovellingly apologetic in tone.

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Note to senior partners, Wolf and law firm top talent spotters: next year, leave the April Fools’ nonsense to the media.

Read Weil’s April Fool email in full below:

Fullemail

The post Global law firm apologises for April Fool promising better work-life balance appeared first on Legal Cheek.

Lawyer to take part in arctic rugby world record attempt

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Eversheds associate will strap on his snow shoes and trek 100 miles to play rugby at the north pole in charity world record attempt

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Eversheds’ real estate specialist lawyer Andrew Walker is less than a fortnight away from embarking on the challenge of lifetime. He will be one of 14 hardy — and arguably slightly foolish — men who will trek 100 miles to the magnetic North Pole to set a Guinness record by playing rugby at the top of the world.

Rugby Union international Tim Stimpson and England sevens star Ollie Phillips will be joint team captains for the icy adventure. All under the expert guidance of polar adventurer Jock Wishart, who to date is the only man to have walked unsupported to a pole and rowed across an ocean.

Walker (pictured below) — a former Newcastle University student — has already raised £21,000 for the rugby-orientated UK and Ireland charity, Wooden Spoon. Ultimately, the adventurous rugby players aim to raise some £300,000 for the cause, which supports a range of projects designed to improve life for disadvantaged children and young people.

Walker

Walker — who has been at Eversheds’s Manchester office since 2013 — is the only lawyer to take part in the challenge. He will be joined by several other former rugby players, businessmen and City types.

And the charity adventure has received high-placed backing, with the young lawyer attending a reception with rugby fan HRH Princess Anne.

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The challenge is expected to take around three weeks with temperatures dropping to a chilly -40c — and that’s before he’s even got into his rugby shorts.

With a constant threat of frostbite and polar bear attacks, it is sure to be an unforgettable match. You can help Walker reacher his target of £30,000 by donating here.

The post Lawyer to take part in arctic rugby world record attempt appeared first on Legal Cheek.

The Judge rules: thank-you, Weil, for exposing work-life balance charade

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Big law firms should be honest with their junior lawyers about what life is like at a top-tier practice: the money is great but it’s hard work

TheJudge

The mask has slipped.

For more than a decade, global law firms have been crapping on about how much they care about their junior lawyers and staff.

Nursery facilities for young mothers, stress counselling for crunch deals, sabbatical arrangements for those keen to self-publish their memoires, yoga classes and even at-your-desk Swedish massage. The work-life balance debate has seen it all.

Yet yesterday, with its ill-conceived April Fools’ gag, New York white shoe firm Weil Gotshal & Manges blew the gaff on the whole charade.

The firm’s spoof note — distributed by the bizarrely titled “chief talent officer” (puts one in mind of jolly summer break cabarets) — has been widely publicised.

In summary, junior lawyers were informed that in a rush of munificence the partnership had dictated that worker bees would no longer be required to keep an eye on their emails between the hours of 11 o’clock in the evening and six o’clock in the morning.

Initially that appeared to be a radical and untypical acknowledgement by an international commercial law firm that human beings actually need sleep to function; but soon the message turned out to have a cruel twist. It was an elaborate joke, triggering outrage from associates that ultimately forced a senior partner into a grovelling apology.

Embarrassing, indeed, for Weil, but ultimately has the firm has done the profession a favour? Yes.

Large law firm partnerships should be honest with their junior lawyers, their clients and prospective trainees by coming clean about what life is like at a top-tier practice. It’s hard … and stressful … and not that much fun most of the time.

This is the drill. From the moment a trainee is taken on at qualification, that person is put on a treadmill involving hours and hours of often tedious work, little actual client contact and harsh criticism if billing targets aren’t met.

For the first few years, these lawyers can effectively wave good-bye to private lives. Trainees should ask themselves: why do so many of these firms effectively have their own restaurants and in some cases even sleeping quarters on site? Because they don’t want you to leave the building — not even for a bloody cheese and pickle roll.

By a certain stage, if an associate hasn’t been bumped up to that nonsense title of salaried partner, then alarm bells ring. And by another stage, if a salaried partner isn’t on track for a slice of the firm’s equity, another set of flashing lights illuminates.

The truth is that commercial/transactional lawyers at large firms are paid well, but they work like pit ponies until they are made full equity partners anywhere between the ages of 45-50 — and then they are pensioned off five years later without so much as a gold watch.

There may be a few hours in the firm swimming pool and a couple of massages and yoga sessions along the way, but there isn’t much balance in the work-life equation.

If nothing else, Weil’s epic April Fools’ “fail” has dramatically illustrated that useful reminder.


Previously:

Global law firm apologises for April Fool promising better work-life balance [Legal Cheek]

The post The Judge rules: thank-you, Weil, for exposing work-life balance charade appeared first on Legal Cheek.

8 top English uni law faculties dropped from Singapore bar approved institution list

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Cries of protectionism ring out as Russell Group stars are axed

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Eight leading English university law faculties are up in arms after they were removed from the Singapore bar’s list of approved institutions.

The decision to drop the law schools has been lambasted as “pure protectionism” by the faculty head at one of the jilted universities.

Paul Kohler, head of law at the School of Oriental and African Studies at London University, said the decision was disappointing but not surprising.

“It is a case of blatant protectionism on the part of the Singapore law schools,” complained Kohler.

The move by the island state’s Ministry of Justice has affected a string of other leading law schools at the universities of Exeter, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield and Southampton.

It is understood that the dropped schools last year accounted for a third of all Singaporean law graduates in the UK — some 221 from a total of 779.

Media reports from Asia suggest the rationale behind the chop was based on supply and demand. The president of the local law society, Thio Shen Yi, was quoted on the website for Channel New Asia as saying:

“As a profession, we will only hire the right numbers that we want. It is all about economics … We are not going to hire extra lawyers just because there is an extra supply. We only hire the right amount of lawyers depending on the amount of work that we have.”

However, leaders at the affected law schools are understood to be bitter over the decision.

“A lot of Singapore students come to England,” said one experienced commentator on legal education, “and this will severely damage income generation and the reputation for English law schools relative to their competitors at Australian universities.”

One source suggested that the Singaporean authorities — who toured UK institutions a year ago — were unimpressed by the results of the National Student Survey for some of the dropped universities.

In a detailed letter to the Singapore Institute of Legal Education, Kohler wrote:

“In today’s globalised economy, students and employers require an LLB to go beyond the parochial confines of English law, and the SOAS LLB is unique in providing that global component as an intrinsic part of the degree”.

Likewise, a spokesman from the University of Exeter told Legal Cheek that the “law school continues to be professionally recognised by a number of other jurisdictions and it maintains strong professional links with law alumni throughout Asia”.

Exeter was quick to point out that it had agreed with the Singapore Ministry of Law that Singaporeans and permanent residents currently studying its LLB — and those with places beginning any time this year — remain eligible for admission to the Singapore bar on graduation.

The Singapore Law Society president held out some hope that the dropped universities could be restored in time, saying:

“As Singapore expands as a legal centre, if things like the Singapore International Commercial Court takes off, and if Singapore law becomes a choice of law for this region, then the scope of Singapore legal services will expand and we will need more lawyers.

“But the reality is that it is going to be a very competitive job market for them if they all want to become lawyers; there simply aren’t enough training contracts on offer.”

Indeed, English commentators warned the dropped law schools that it was unlikely any of them would be reinstated on the Singapore approved list within five years.

Eleven English university law schools remain approved: Birmingham, Bristol, Cambridge, Durham, King’s College London, the LSE, Queen Mary and Westfield London, University College London, Nottingham, Oxford and Warwick.

The post 8 top English uni law faculties dropped from Singapore bar approved institution list appeared first on Legal Cheek.

These aren’t drafting tips … Prof sends students anal beads porn link in email fail‏

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Philadelphia law school of many expensive names investigates how a link to Porn Hub was included in helpful guide to students

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On this side of the Atlantic, four hapless and now former judges were in a spot of unfortunate bother last month for casting eyes towards the erotic side of the web — in the US, a law professor is allegedly in the same embarrassing position.

The authorities at Drexel University’s Thomas R Kline School of Law in Philadelphia are reported to have launched an investigation into how a link to a pornographic website was attached to a professor’s email to students that was meant to flag up recommended reading.

The note (below) from Associate Professor Lisa McElroy was intended to be a helpful pointer towards an article on “brief writing”, or drafting. Instead, the URL took (probably grateful) students to a site intriguingly titled “She loves her anal beads”.

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A report from our US friends Above the Law speculates that the cock up (sorry) could have been the result of the sender carelessly keeping too many web browser pages open at one time.

Likewise, the site points out that Prof McElroy could simply be the innocent victim of web spamming worm thingys that crawl into a computer and randomly distribute porn and other links to a user’s email address book.

McElroy herself seems a jolly prof; the Harvard law school graduate practised at Boston firms Testa Hurwitz & Thibeault and Gadsby & Hannah before jumping into academia. She is a regular contributor to a New York Times blog — and five years ago appeared on the US version of “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?”, ultimately falling down on the $12,500 question.

As with the English judges, there is no suggestion of illegality around the incident, and strong arguments have been voiced that law professors are as entitled as anyone else to dip into whatever legal websites they fancy. They should just be careful when copying and pasting links.

According to Above the Law, a university spokesperson confirmed an investigation into the email was underway, but declined to comment on whether McElroy had been suspended.

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Arguably more interesting, the McElroy saga shines a spotlight on an increasing US phenomenon — the selling of law school naming rights.

Launched only in 2005, Drexel University’s law school was originally called simply the College of Law. Three years later, it was redubbed the Earl I Mack School of Law, after a $15 million donation from the alumnus, real estate tycoon and former US ambassador to Finland.

Five years later — presumably after the administrators had run through that cash — the name shifted to the Drexel University School of Law, but that generic moniker lasted for only 12 months.

Last year, Philadelphia trial lawyer Thomas R Kline — who reportedly had no affiliation with the university — coughed up a $50 million grant to bag the naming rights; it is hoped that large bundle will keep his name in lights for some time.

Previously:

Judges sacked for watching porn on court computers [Legal Cheek]

The post These aren’t drafting tips … Prof sends students anal beads porn link in email fail‏ appeared first on Legal Cheek.

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