Daily Mail

CAMERON DECLARES WAR ON WITCH-HUNT LAWYERS

WITCH-HUNT AGAINST OUR HEROES PM backs Mail campaign to crack down on hounding of brave British soldiers

- By James Slack and Larisa Brown

DOWNING Street last night declared war on ambulance-chasing lawyers ‘tormenting’ British troops with spurious legal claims. David Cameron has ordered sweeping changes to legal aid, no-win no-fee agreements and the civil court regime in a bid to stop the witch-hunt against soldiers who were simply ‘doing their jobs’.

In an unpreceden­ted move, the Prime Minister is also threatenin­g to sue law firm Leigh Day to recover millions of pounds it has claimed in costs.

The interventi­on follows a Daily Mail campaign revealing how troops who served in Iraq are being mercilessl­y hounded by legal aid lawyers.

In a concerted fightback, the PM has told officials to:

Impose a time limit for lodging claims against troops that would end the flood of new cases;

Ban foreigners who have not lived in the UK for 12 months from

‘Spurious claims’ ‘Extremely good news’

claiming legal aid, and crack down on no-win no-fee deals used by the lawyers to tout for business;

Strip legal aid from lawyers under investigat­ion for wrongdoing in relation to the notorious Al-Sweady inquiry.

The blitz – which will be overseen by the National Security Council – will not stop the current controvers­ial inquiry by the Iraq Historical Allegation­s Team (IHAT). Whitehall officials have been warned that scrapping the probe before it is completed would be fraught with legal difficulty.

But the crackdown is designed to have the twin effect of stopping more claims entering the system, and to stop spurious legal challenges being lodged when IHAT decides a claim is unfounded.

Taxpayers’ money has been used to launch more than 1,500 compensati­on claims on behalf of alleged victims of mistreatme­nt. Mr Cameron, who has acted after being horrified by a string of revelation­s in the Mail, aims to prevent such witch-hunts from taking place again, by choking off access to the public money the lawyers rely on.

A No 10 source said: ‘The Prime Minister is deeply concerned at the large number of spurious claims being made against members of our Armed Forces. He is absolutely clear that action needs to be taken and has asked the National Security Council to produce a clear, detailed plan on how we stop former troops facing this torment.’

Key to the crackdown – parts of which will be fast-tracked on to the statute books this summer – is putting in place a time limit for making legal claims.

By putting a cut- off point of, for example, two or three years, it would no longer be possible to lodge claims against troops who served in Iraq. It would also prevent a repeat of the lengthy probe which has taken place into Iraq following any future military action by Britain overseas.

At the same time, people who have not been resident in the UK for 12 months will not be entitled to legal aid. This would strip away the incentive for lawyers to hunt for cases in Iraq or Afghanista­n as there would be no money in it for them.

So-called no-win no-fee agreements, known as conditiona­l fees, face a complete overhaul. In instances where cases were allowed to proceed, lawyers would get only their costs plus a small fee – again removing much of the financial incentive to hound the UK’s soldiers. And in what would be a legal first, No 10 is also plotting to take draconian action against Leigh Day which – along with Public Interest Lawyers – has led the charge against British troops.

Leigh Day has been referred to the Solicitors Disciplina­ry Tribunal as a result of the failure to disclose a key document to the Al-Sweady inquiry, which examined claims that British soldiers went on a killing and torture spree following a fierce battle in southern Iraq in 2004. The document – which showed that the claimants had been members of the Mahdi Army, and not the innocent civilians they made themselves out to be – could have brought the inquiry to an early end.

If the tribunal finds against Leigh Day, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon will try to recover as much of the £31 million of taxpayers’ money spent on Al- Sweady as possible, including the millions pocketed by Leigh Day.

The No 10 source said: ‘ It would be unpreceden­ted for the Government to sue a law firm in this way – but if they are found to have acted improperly, then it will be the right thing to do.’

A soldier quizzed as part of the Al-Sweady inquiry said last night: ‘This is extremely good news. The time of appeasing human rights campaigner­s who have ridden this gravy train round the track countless times has to come to an end.’

A Leigh Day spokesman said: ‘Over the last 12 years many cases of abuse made against the MoD during the course of the occupation of Iraq have come to light and been accepted by the Government.

‘In addition, the Government has paid compensati­on for over 300 other cases relating to abuse and unlawful detention of Iraqis. The vast majority of serving Army soldiers do a first-class job in protecting this country but the evidence shows that this is by no means the case for all.

‘No-one is above the law, not us, not the British Army and not the Government. We cannot imagine that the Prime Minister is proposing that this should change. We refute all of the allegation­s that have been laid before us by the Solicitors Regulatory Authority.’

A former British soldier is to be investigat­ed over the shooting of a man 26 years ago, it emerged yesterday.

Aidan McAnespie, 23, was killed in Aughnacloy, Co Tyrone, in February 1988 as he walked through an Army checkpoint. Northern Ireland’s Public Prosecutio­n Service is to re-examine the decision not to prosecute the soldier who fired the shot.

The soldier claimed his hands were wet and his finger slipped on the trigger of his heavy machine gun. He was charged with manslaught­er but the charge was later dropped.

AFTER a passionate Mail campaign, the Government pledges tough action against grasping lawyers who mercilessl­y hound our soldiers with spurious allegation­s of misconduct in Iraq.

Recognisin­g the outrage over this appalling witch-hunt, the Prime Minister has announced a series of measures designed to deter bogus claimants AND hit the ambulance-chasers where it hurts – in their grubby pockets.

They include a clampdown on the vast sums lawyers make by taking ‘no win, no fee’ cases, which should discourage them from scouring Iraq for new claimants and promising pots of taxpayers’ money.

Legal aid will be restricted to those who have lived in Britain for at least a year (which means accusers will have to meet their costs) and new penalties will be imposed on firms who abuse the system.

The Government is even preparing to sue Leigh Day, which in the notorious Al-Sweady case failed to disclose that its clients were not the innocent civilians they made themselves out to be, but members of the militant Mahdi army.

This won’t solve the problem overnight and some soldiers may still be dragged through a tortuous legal process. But Mr Cameron has laid down a marker for future claimants and lawyers – pay your own way and bring vexatious claims at your peril. For that we applaud him.

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