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Chinwe Uzo Chikwendu; Undiga Emuekpere

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number12521/2023
Date27/04/2026
OutcomeReprimand, Suspend - Fixed Period

Allegation / charges

Breaches, Code of Conduct 2011, Code of Conduct for Solicitors, REL's & RFL's 2019, Dishonesty, SRA Principles 2011, SRA Principles 2019

Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision

SanctionSuspension
Suspension24 months
CostsGBP 30,000
Dishonesty foundYes

Both solicitors at Riverbrooke Solicitors faced allegations over an Employment Tribunal costs matter for Client A. Allegation 1 (preparing a grossly inflated bill of £85,573.50) was found NOT proved against either Respondent, the Tribunal being unsatisfied the bill was grossly inflated despite poor time-recording. Allegation 2, against the Second Respondent only, was proved: she created a false/misleading attendance note suggesting costs of over £30,000 were discussed at a 29 July 2017 meeting when they were not, created later for the Legal Ombudsman investigation; the Tribunal made an express finding of dishonesty under Ivey, plus breaches of integrity and public trust. Allegation 3, against the First Respondent only, was proved: she failed to cooperate with the SRA by delaying nearly three months in responding to requests and a s.44B notice. Sanctions: Second Respondent suspended 2 years (strike-off held disproportionate due to exceptional circumstances - inexperience, isolated, no financial gain, no client loss); First Respondent reprimanded. Each ordered to pay £15,000 costs (£30,000 total), reduced from the £137,773 sought.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Second Respondent's dishonesty involved altering an important contemporaneous record and allowing it to be relied upon during the Legal Ombudsman's investigation, causing high harm to the regulatory process
  • First Respondent's failure to cooperate occurred over a significant period despite repeated reminders and her senior role as manager/owner

Mitigating factors:

  • Both Respondents had unblemished regulatory records
  • Second Respondent: dishonesty confined to a single entry in a single attendance note, no wider course of conduct, inexperience (first litigated case), no financial motivation, no direct client loss
  • First Respondent: isolated lapse, low culpability, no material delay to proceedings, remorse, positive character references

Codes & rules applied

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/12521/