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Dr Bashir Qureshi. Expert Witness in Cultural, Religious & Ethnic issues in Litigation and also in GP Clinical Negligence, London.

Expert Witness Blog

The fiduciary duty disconnect: who has responsibility on climate?

The fiduciary duty disconnect: who has responsibility on climate?

By Dr Mark Hinnells, director of Susenco Consulting Ltd

Fiduciary duty is when one person has an obligation in law to act in the best interests of another. It has usually been seen as financial and relatively short term.Currently the fiduciary duties of various actors – including cabinet ministers, fund or investment managers and company directors – are defined in different places in different ways, in a combination of law, policy and guidance, some of which is litigable and some is not.

 Increasingly, a longer time frame is being applied to fiduciary duty. As the impacts and costs of climate change are better understood, the risk to assets, investments, companies, financial systems and ultimately GDP becomes ever more obvious.

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Expert Witness News

New fraud law will help build an ‘anti-fraud culture‘

New fraud law will help build an ‘anti-fraud culture‘

A new corporate criminal offence of ‘failure to prevent fraud’ came into effect on 1 September – designed to drive an anti-fraud culture and improve business confidence. 

Introduced as part of the Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act (ECCT) 2023, the offence will hold large organisations to account if they profit from fraud. It forms part of wider measures introduced by the government to tackle fraud and protect the UK economy, as part of the Plan for Change. 

The offence of ‘failure to prevent fraud’ follows major steps forward on fraud prevention including: 

• Pushing forward with a ban on SIM farms – technical devices which facilitate fraud on an industrial scale
• A bilateral agreement with the insurance sector
• Adopting the first ever UN resolution on fraud

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Expert Witness : Medico Legal

Trusts named for inclusion in Amos inquiry

Trusts named for inclusion in Amos inquiry

The 14 hospital trusts to be looked at as part of a rapid, independent, national investigation into maternity and neonatal services were named on 15 September 2025 by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC). 

Baroness Valerie Amos’s investigation will put families at the heart of the work, the DHSC said, and affected families were asked to provide input to the draft terms of reference of the investigation. The terms of reference have been developed to focus on understanding the experiences of affected women and families, identifying lessons learned and driving the improvements needed to ensure high-quality and safe maternity and neonatal care across England. 

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Expert Witness Legal News

Lawyers sceptical about efficacy of extra court tier

Lawyers sceptical about efficacy of extra court tier

Solicitors have expressed pessimism over whether an additional court tier will help reduce the rocketing criminal court backlogs. 

The Law Society of England and Wales carried out research, in collaboration with Sky News, asking solicitors for their views on potential reforms to the criminal courts. 

Proposals include introducing an intermediate court, which would be known as the Crown Court Bench Division. The research revealed that: 

• Solicitors felt a broad range of measures would be required for an additional court tier to be effective, including additional court staff who are fully trained, and increased public funding for legal defence.
• Most solicitors think the introduction of an additional court tier would make the justice system worse (56%) and is unlikely to reduce the backlogs (60%).
• Almost three-quarters (73%) of the solicitors surveyed were concerned about jury trials being removed as part of the proposals.

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Expert Witness : Building and Property

Construction is still suffering from its COVID hangover

Construction is still suffering from its COVID hangover

The COVID-19 pandemic has had a profound and lasting impact on the construction industry, disrupting timelines, inflating costs and introducing unprecedented risk management challenges. 

Architects and engineers have been at the forefront of addressing those challenges, particularly in projects involving specialist accommodation, complex infrastructure or historic buildings. In parallel, legal teams and insurers have increasingly turned to expert witnesses to provide independent assessments of delays, costs and associated risks, ensuring clarity and fairness in contract disputes or claims arising from the pandemic. 

In disputes arising from COVID-19-related delays, expert witnesses have played a vital role. Legal teams frequently instruct construction, engineering and cost management specialists to provide independent evaluations of project delays, financial losses and compliance with contractual obligations. 

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Expert Witness : Criminal

More psychologists are in court – and that’s a good thing!

More psychologists are in court – and that’s a good thing!

Vulnerable offenders with mental health, alcohol and substance abuse problems are increasingly being diverted from short-term custodial sentences and towards treatment that aims to tackle the causes of their offending.

In the pilot areas – Birmingham, Plymouth, Sefton, Milton Keynes and Northampton – psychologists are working collaboratively with the existing panels of justice and health officials. Together, the professionals ensure that magistrates and judges have the information they need to determine whether an offender should be required to receive treatment for their mental health, alcohol or drug issues.

They help to ensure that Community Sentence Treatment Requirements (CTSRs) are issued to the right people. CSTRs are a joint initiative by the Ministry of Justice, Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England and Public Health England to improve access to treatment programmes for offenders serving community sentences.

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Expert Witness : Technology

Government to plug mobile phone loophole

Government to plug mobile phone loophole

The government has confirmed it will close a legal loophole which has allowed drivers to escape prosecution for hand-held mobile phone use while behind the wheel.

At present, the law prevents drivers from using a hand-held mobile phone to call or text.

However, people caught filming or taking photos while driving have escaped punishment as lawyers have successfully argued that the activity does not fit into the ‘interactive communication’ currently outlawed by the legislation.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has announced that he will urgently take forward a review to tighten up the existing law. The revised legislation will mean any driver caught texting, taking photos, browsing the internet or scrolling through a playlist while behind the wheel will be prosecuted for using a hand-held mobile phone while driving.

Mr Shapps said: “We recognise that staying in touch with the world while travelling is an essential part of modern day life, but we are also committed to making our roads safe. ...

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Expert Witness : Environment

The fundamental right to be protected from the dangers of air pollution

The fundamental right to be protected from the dangers of air pollution

The British Safety Council welcomed the news of the High Court quashing the verdict of the 2014 inquest into the death of nine-year old Ella Kissi-Debrah, who suffered a fatal asthma attack. Her mother Rosamund has since campaigned for a fresh inquest, believing Ella’s death was caused by high levels of air pollution near her home in southeast London. It means that Ella could become the first person in the UK to have air pollution mentioned as a contributory factor on her death certificate.

Lawrence Waterman, Chairman of the British Safety Council, commented: “The ruling of the High Court is proof that since 2014 we have become much better informed about the dangers of air pollution. Air pollution, linked to as many as 36,000 early deaths a year, is now recognised as the biggest environmental risk to public health. Research from King’s College London suggests that more than 9,400 people die prematurely due to poor air quality in London alone.

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Expert Witness : Animal & Farming

Dr WHO? by Dr Debbie Marsden

Dr WHO? by Dr Debbie Marsden

Dr Debbie Marsden, a leading equestrian expert with over 20 years professional experience of expert witness work, offers some advice on selecting the right expert in cases involving animals

In animal related cases, a veterinary surgeon is often the best expert, being generally regarded as an authority on animals and easily recognized by the word 'veterinary' – a protected title – and the letters MRCVS (Member of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons) after various degrees.

As with all professions, when seeking an expert it is best to use a specialist; and vets are not allowed to describe themselves as a 'specialist' until they have taken considerable further study and been further examined in a particular area. The letter D or Dip, for Diploma, is the additional qualification to look for in a vet with particular expertise in any area, for instance DSAS – Diploma in Small Animal Surgery (Orthopaedics).

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Parliament, Legislation And Public Sector

Home Office GDPR exemption risks new Windrush, says Law Society

Home Office GDPR exemption risks new Windrush, says Law Society

The Law Society of England and Wales has criticised the decision to exempt the Home Office from data access rules in the new Data Protection Act, which implements the widely-publicised GDPR. The move will inevitably lead to miscarriages of justice, the society has warned.

Law Society president Joe Egan said the immigration exemption in the legislation stripped accountability from Home Office decision making.

“Since legal aid was removed for most immigration cases in 2012, it has become increasingly difficult to challenge immigration decisions – decisions which evidence shows are often incorrect,” he said. “Subject access requests are the final recourse for people trying to deal with a complex, opaque and unaccountable immigration system.

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Expert Witness: Events

Expert witness conference is hailed a success

Expert witness conference is hailed a success

On 8 November Bond Solon held the 25th Bond Solon Expert Witness Conference at Church House in Westminster. Demand for the conference had been particularly high, leading to a fully-booked event. Nearly 500 expert witnesses were in attendance and there were over 50 expert witnesses on the waiting list.

That upsurge in demand for places was in part due to the expert witness guidance issued in May by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges. The guidance stated that healthcare expert witnesses must undertake formal expert witness training and keep that training up to date with appropriate refresher courses and activities.

Demand was also driven by a number of high-profile cases involving expert witnesses who have had their expert witness evidence deemed inadmissible or criticised. Those cases were reviewed at the conference.

The keynote speech at the conference was delivered by Sir Peter Gross. Sir Peter’s paper addressed the issue of standards in the work of expert witnesses. Sir Peter was fol...

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 Your Expert Witness Issue 76


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Jones v Kaney nine months on by Chris Makin - mediator

On 30 March 2011, the Supreme Court gave its judgment in Jones –v- Kaney[2011] UKSC 13, the case which saw an end to the expert witness’s immunity from suit in negligence. This reversed a line of authority dating back 400 years, and commentators have called it a landmark ruling, a historic decision, a major victory for claimant lawyers, the end of the amateur expert, and the professionalising of the expert witness industry. How valid are these comments?

Let us consider what has changed over the last nine months.

First, the facts.

Paul Jones was a motorcyclist, injured in an RTA by one Bennett, a car driver who was drunk, uninsured and disqualified. Dr Sue Kaney, a consultant clinical psychologist for the claimant, produced a report saying that Mr Jones was suffering from PTSD. Dr El-Assra was appointed by the defence, and he disagreed. There was an experts’ discussion by telephone, and Dr El-Assra drafted a joint statement and sent it to Dr Kaney for her agreement. It stated that Dr Kaney had changed her opinion; that Mr Jones had suffered only from an adjustment reaction, not PTSD, and that Mr Jones had been “very deceptive and deceitful in his reporting”. Unsurprisingly, this was hugely damaging to the claim, and Mr Jones felt obliged to settle for damages much lower than he thought were his due.

It emerged that the joint statement did not reflect Dr Kaney’s views at all; she had felt under pressure to sign the joint statement, and had done so without even reading it!

Mr Jones sued Dr Kaney for negligence, and lost at first instance because the Court of Appeal in 1998 had said in Stanton –v- Callaghan that experts could not be sued for negligence in preparing joint statements. So the claimant was allowed to leapfrog his appeal directly to the Supreme Court, which found 5:2 that the expert could be sued; so now expert witnesses can be sued for negligence in the evidence they give (an expert’s evidence includes their report and their joint statement, as well as any oral evidence given at the hearing) which is quite different from the immunity given to witnesses of fact.

Space does not allow discussion of the reasons for the majority decision, or the interesting views of Lord Hope and Lady Hale who dissented; we must turn to what difference this has made to the expert witness “industry”.

I suppose serious experts such as the writer could complain about Dr Kaney letting the side down; after all, it was naïve to sign a joint statement without reading it, whereas the joint “meeting” of experts and of the joint statement form an important part of the expert’s evidence.
 But I have no sympathy with that; it is basic law that there should be no wrong without a remedy, and if an expert has failed in their duty of care to their client (as well, in this case, as expressing to the Court an opinion which she does not even hold) then they should be held responsible.

There is ongoing debate about whether experts should be amateur or professional; and that depends in my view on how fast-moving is the area of expertise needed. In some fields such as highly specialised areas of medicine a clinical practitioner may be essential; in others, such as my field of accountancy, it is acceptable for full-time experts to keep abreast of developments through regular training. Of course an expert must not take on a case unless they do have detailed and current knowledge, and that must be kept under constant review; only last week I turned down an assignment which required specialised knowledge which I could not profess. But this is rare.

The point to appreciate by experts, and by those choosing to appoint them, is that they must in effect be members of two professions: they must of course have qualifications and experience in their own field, but they must also know enough about being an expert to carry out those functions effectively. This must include knowledge of the CPR or equivalent; of how to write an expert report and what it must contain; of how not to stray outside one’s own field of expertise, of how to conduct a “meeting” of experts, of how to give evidence at a hearing, and so on.

This is something which I recognised, early in my career as an expert accountant. I had taken the trouble to be properly trained at The Academy of Experts (where I am now a fellow), yet I regularly met at trial accountants who thought it was “sexy” to act as an expert, who thought it a useful way of filling in between their audit assignments, but who didn’t have a clue about their duties to the court as an expert. These “wannabees” were doing the legal process no good at all, let alone the damage they were doing to my profession.

So when I first joined the committee of the Forensic Special Interest Group at the ICAEW, we developed a carrot and stick approach against such enthusiastic amateurs. The stick was that a chartered accountant who took on a case they were not competent to perform would be disciplined by the ICAEW. The carrot was that those who could demonstrate a very high standard of expertise in expert witness work, as well as being competent chartered accountants, would have the kudos of being recognised as a leader in their field, and gain more appointments.

And so it has come to pass. It took seven years to perfect, but the ICAEW accreditation scheme was launched in late 2010, and the handful who have demonstrated the very high standard required may be found at www.icaew.com/forensicaccreditation/register. These are the members of the two professions necessary to perform expert witness assignments.

In my view, Jones –v- Kaney has changed little. It merely emphasises the importance of choosing horses for courses. An expert who takes on more than he should and makes a mess of it may be sued, and quite right too. But in choosing your experts, if you go for someone who bears the kitemark of their professional body as being an expertexpert witness, you will be in safe hands, and your clients will receive the high standard of service they deserve.

Biog: Chris Makin is one of only 30 or so chartered accountants to become an Accredited Forensic Accountant and Expert Witness – www.icaew.com/forensicaccreditation/register. He is also an accredited civil & commercial mediator and an accredited expert determiner. He has given expert evidence at least 70 times and worked on a vast range of cases over the last 23 years. For CV, war stories and much more, go to www.chrismakin.co.uk.