A father is pressing fraud charges against his teenage daughter after she used his credit card to buy a plane ticket to visit her boyfriend in Germany. The love-lorn teenager was hauled off the flight before it departed when the father got a call from his bank about possible fraudulent charges from
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A man remanded into custody as a result of breaking the conditions of his suspended sentence has lost a constitutional challenge to his sentence in the Court of Appeal. The man had argued that since subsections 99 (9) and (10) of the Criminal Justice Act 2006 had been declared unconstitutional in Mo
Minister of State Dara Murphy The Department of Justice is examining the impact of a High Court ruling in which a bank's application for summary judgment against a farmer and his wife was refused due to EU rules on unfair contracts.
Willie O'Dea Opposition party Fianna Fáil will propose legislative measures to prevent solvent businesses winding up defined benefit pension plans, the Irish Independent reports.
Sir Gerald Howarth, MP for Aldershot The Public Prosecution Service for Northern Ireland (PPS) has firmly rejected accusations of bias made by a Conservative MP.
The Courts Service of Ireland is now hand-delivering letters to addresses in Limerick where repossession orders are to be made, the Irish Independent reports. Eight letters have reportedly been hand-delivered in Limerick by an appointed messenger since the start of the year.
Pictured (l-r): Brian Dolaghan, Invest NI; Alan Hunter, Law Society Chief Executive; Brian Speers, DRS Chair; Anne Beggs, Invest NI; Colum Eastwood MLA; and Michael Bready, Mediator/Barrister The mediation service administered by the Law Society of Northern Ireland has received accreditation from th
Judith Allen TLT has appointed Judith Allen as a real estate partner. She will be working from the firm's Belfast office.
A disabled man who was unable to board a bus because a mother with a buggy refused to vacate the space has had his appeal unanimously allowed, albeit to a limited extent, by judges in the UK Supreme Court. The appeal concerns the lawfulness of a bus company’s policy in relation to the use of the s
Adam Leitch Adam Leitch, solicitor at Cleaver Fulton Rankin Solicitors in Belfast, writes on the impact on artists of new UK copyright laws.
A man who broke into a house and murdered a couple and their son before raping their daughter suffered no violation of his article 3 right – prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment – judges in the European Court of Human Rights have ruled by 14 votes to 3. The case concerned a complaint by
President Barack Obama Chelsea Manning, the US soldier jailed for leaking classified information to WikiLeaks, will be released this May.
A reggae festival has been granted exemption from anti-drug laws to allow revellers to roll their reefers and enjoy their ganja without fear of arrest. The Rebel Salute reggae festival, founded in 1994 by Rastafarian sing-jay Tony Rebel, can also now openly advertise as a marijuana festival for the
Facebook has succeeded in its appeal against an award of £20,000 in compensation, which the High Court held it was liable to pay to a convicted sex offender for misuse of private information. In finding that Facebook could only be held liable for a limited 10-day period in which information about t
Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire The Northern Ireland Assembly is set to be dissolved from Thursday 26 January ahead of an early election on Thursday 2 March.

