Jonathan Michael Duff
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Criminal Convictions
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
The respondent, admitted in 1984, was convicted at Manchester Crown Court on 1 July 2002 of two counts of failing to disclose knowledge or suspicion of money laundering, pleading guilty and receiving concurrent prison terms of six and three months. The conduct arose while acting as a solicitor for drug traffickers; he had deposited £70,000 in a client account and used a fictitious name ledger. The Tribunal found the allegations substantiated, noting the respondent could not go behind his conviction. Given the seriousness of the practice-related conviction and a prior 2001 Tribunal appearance resulting in a current two-year suspension, the Tribunal struck him off the Roll and ordered costs of £3,801.96. No express finding of dishonesty was made (the earlier 2001 matter expressly found the high standard for dishonesty not met).
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- Criminal conviction and imprisonment for money laundering offences
- Conduct arose in the course of acting as a solicitor
- Substantial sums involved (£70,000 deposited)
- Use of a fictitious name within client account ledger
- Previous Tribunal appearance in 2001 with serious allegations substantiated; currently suspended
Mitigating factors:
- Offence described by sentencing judge as at the lower end of this type of offence
- Respondent's explanation that he believed there was no obligation to report past transactions