Lewis Brady
Allegation / charges
Code of Conduct for Solicitors, REL's & RFL's 2019, SRA Principles 2019
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
The Respondent, a solicitor at Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe, faced allegations of unwanted, inappropriate and sexually motivated conduct towards two female colleagues. The Tribunal found two of the multiple allegations proved on the balance of probabilities: non-consensual touching of Person A's bottom (20 October 2021) and non-consensual touching of Person B's breast three times during a taxi journey (24-25 March 2022). It found breaches of Principles 2 and 5 (public trust and integrity) but did not find a breach of Code Paragraph 1.2 (abuse of position) as the parties were peers. There was no finding of dishonesty (only lack of integrity). The Tribunal imposed a 12-month suspension. Costs originally fixed at £95,389.92 were varied by consent on appeal to £30,000.
Duties found breached:
Aggravating factors:
- The misconduct was sexual in nature
- Involved separate complaints from two victims
Mitigating factors:
- Relatively young solicitor
- Worked in a 'work hard, play hard' culture with long hours and heavy drinking where 'pushing of boundaries' was commonly accepted
- Events occurred shortly after the national lockdown, a period of social and psychological adjustment
- Unblemished regulatory record
- Genuine remorse and significant personal impact (acute depression, suicidal thoughts)
- Positive character references
Codes & rules applied
Duties engaged
- No abuse of process or coercive powers
- Integrity
- No taking unfair advantage
- Fair dealing with unrepresented parties
- No bribery or improper gifts
- Personal probity and fitness to practise
- Uphold public trust in the profession
- No unlawful discrimination or harassment
- Fair, reasonable and lawful fees
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper benefit, loan or bequest