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Roger Paul Jackson & Second Respondent & Third Respondent

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number11921/2019
Date01/01/2019
OutcomeFine, Strike off

Allegation / charges

Breaches, Failures

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

SanctionStrike Off
CostsGBP 40,682
Dishonesty foundYes

SDT case 11921-2019. The First Respondent, Roger Paul Jackson, was found to have fabricated telephone attendance notes, caused a false Notice of Funding indicating ATE insurance to be filed, failed to take out ATE insurance, failed to inform clients their claims were stayed/struck out, and failed to disclose his connection to M&S Vehicle Hire (his wife's company). The Tribunal made express findings of dishonesty against him on allegations 1.2, 1.4, 1.7, 1.8 and 1.9 and ordered he be struck off the Roll, paying costs of £40,681.84. The Second Respondent (COLP) was found to have breached Principle 7 (failure to report/cooperate) and to have lacked integrity in failing to inform a client (AS) of the firm's failings; fined £10,000 plus £20,340.91 costs (the Principle 2 allegation on 2.2 was dismissed). The Third Respondent was found to have lacked integrity over the undisclosed M&S connection but several allegations were dismissed; fined £4,000 (reduced from £7,501 for means) plus £6,780.30 costs. Total costs claimed were £67,803.05, apportioned 60/30/10.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Proven dishonesty
  • Deliberate and calculated conduct continuing over time
  • Concealment of failings by fabricating attendance notes
  • Breach of trust as clients' advisor
  • Two previous Tribunal appearances (including a prior 6-month suspension)
  • High culpability; motivated by personal gain and self-protection

Mitigating factors:

  • For Second Respondent: 44 years unblemished record, ensured clients suffered no financial loss, cooperation, conduct in early days of compliance regime
  • For Third Respondent: relative inexperience, reliance on First Respondent, no further allegations, updated firm systems, cooperation - least culpable

Duties engaged

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/11921/