Graham Peter Osborn-King
Allegation / charges
Breaches, Failures, Others
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Graham Peter Osborn-King, admitted 1975, was found guilty of conduct unbefitting a solicitor on eight admitted allegations, including making unsolicited and abusive approaches to potential clients, breaching the Solicitors Publicity Code, making offensive and improper statements about other solicitors, falsely claiming to be retained, failing to notify The Law Society of his voluntary arrangement with creditors, and failing to disclose assets (three antique rings and a gifted Mercedes) in that arrangement. He did not appear and was not represented but admitted all allegations. The Tribunal noted his ill health and previously unblemished record but, to protect the public and the profession's reputation, suspended him indefinitely and ordered him to pay costs of £2,218.06. No express finding of dishonesty was made.
Duties found breached:
- No conflict between current clients
- No improper benefit, loan or bequest
- No improper communication with the court
- No improper solicitation or touting
- No prejudicial publicity for pending cases
- Not mislead third parties or opponents
Aggravating factors:
- Offensive and abusive conduct towards other solicitors
- Failure to disclose assets in the voluntary arrangement
Mitigating factors:
- Long career as a solicitor without serious complaint until recently
- Ill health accepted by the Applicant (though no formal medical evidence produced)
- Admitted all allegations
- Expressed remorse and apology