§ discipline

No obstruction or victimisation of reporters profession

The lawyer must not prevent or deter anyone from reporting to the regulator, must not incentivise withdrawal of a complaint, and must not victimise a complainant or good-faith whistleblower.

47 cases 34% strike-off 1 with dishonesty finding

How the codes express this duty

E&W Solicitors SRA Principles & Code CCS 7.5; CCS 7.9 strong 11 cases
7.5 You do not attempt to prevent anyone from providing information to the SRA or any other body exercising regulatory, supervisory, investigatory or prosecutory functions in the public interest. 7.9 You do not subject any person to detrimental treatment for making or proposing to make a report or providing or proposing to provide information based on a reasonably held belief under paragraph 7.7 or 7.8 above ...
E&W Barristers BSB Handbook rC69 strong 1 case
rC69 You must not victimise anyone for making in good faith a report under Rule C66.
Cayman Islands Legal Services Code 2026 R.13.4(a); R.13.4(c); R.13.4(d) strong
attempt to hinder or prevent a person who wishes to report the attorney-at-law's conduct to the Council from doing so... offer any incentive to a complainant to withdraw a complaint... victimise a person for reporting the attorney-at-law's conduct to the Council
AU Solicitors Solicitors' Conduct Rules no clear equivalent
AU Barristers Uniform Barristers Rules no clear equivalent
IE Solicitors Law Society Guide no clear equivalent
IE Barristers Bar Code of Conduct no clear equivalent
JM Attorneys Canons of Professional Ethics no clear equivalent
JE Lawyers Law Society of Jersey Code R.12.4 a)-d) strong
Members must not: a) attempt to hinder or prevent a person who wishes to report their conduct to the Law Society from doing so; b) take any action or enter into an agreement which would attempt to preclude the Law Society from investigating any complaint... c) offer any incentive to a complainant to withdraw a complaint; d) victimise a person for reporting their conduct to the Law Society.
ON Lawyers LSO Rules of Prof. Conduct r 7.1-4 to 7.1-4.3 partial
7.1-4 In addition to other advice appropriate in the circumstances, a lawyer shall encourage a client who has a claim or complaint against an apparently dishonest licensee to report the facts to the Law Society as soon as reasonably practicable. [7.1-4.2: A lawyer shall inform a client of the provision of the Criminal Code dealing with the concealment of an indictable offence in return for an agreement to obtain valuable consideration (section 141). 7.1-4.3: If the client wishes to pursue a private agreement with the apparently dishonest lawyer, the lawyer shall not continue to act if the agreement constitutes a breach of section 141 of the Criminal Code.]
BC Lawyers BC Code r 3.2-6, commentary [1] partial
A lawyer must not: (a) give or offer to give, or advise an accused or any other person to give or offer to give, any valuable consideration to another person in exchange for influencing the Crown or a regulatory authority's conduct of a criminal or quasi-criminal charge or a complaint, unless the lawyer obtains the consent of the Crown or the regulatory authority to enter into such discussions; ... (c) wrongfully influence any person to prevent the Crown or regulatory authority from proceeding with charges or a complaint or to cause the Crown or regulatory authority to withdraw the complaint or stay charges in a criminal or quasi-criminal proceeding. [Commentary [1]: "Regulatory authority" includes professional and other regulatory bodies.]
NZ Lawyers Conduct & Client Care Rules r 2.10.1 strong
A lawyer must not victimise a person who, in good faith,— (a) makes a complaint or a report under rule 2.8 or 2.9; or (b) is otherwise connected with a complaint or a report under rule 2.8 or 2.9.
SCO Solicitors LSS Standards of Conduct no clear equivalent
SG Lawyers Professional Conduct Rules 2015 no clear equivalent
HK Solicitors Solicitors' Guide Principle 5.09 / Commentary 1 / Principle 14.11 partial
A solicitor should not accept instructions which at any stage involve an agreement whereby the Law Society is precluded from investigating the conduct of a solicitor or his employee. ... It is improper for a solicitor to seek to preclude his client or former client from reporting a solicitor's conduct to the Law Society. ... A solicitor must not demand compensation for refraining from reporting an alleged breach of undertaking.
HK Barristers Bar Code of Conduct no clear equivalent

Cases dealing with this duty

Clear

47 decisions · link basis: found breached = a tribunal finding; rule cited = the mapped provision is cited in the decision; text match = high-precision text pattern

Duty classification does not yet cover every jurisdiction (Ontario, New Zealand and Singapore decisions are indexed but not yet duty-classified), so counts here understate those corpora.