§ discipline
‹ Back

Paul Christopher Flaherty; William John Gregory Osmond

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
BodySolicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT)
Professionsolicitor
Case number12647/2024
Date01/04/2025
OutcomeFine, Suspend - Fixed Period

Allegation / charges

Breaches, Failures, Misappropriation of Client Account, Money Laundering Regulations, Solicitors Accounts Rules 2011, SRA Principles 2011

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

SanctionSuspension
Suspension12 months
FineGBP 5,001
CostsGBP 65,000
Dishonesty foundNo

The SDT approved Agreed Outcomes against two solicitors at Osmond Solicitors Ltd. Between 2014 and 2017 the firm received c.£31.9m and paid out c.£28.3m through its client account for client Person A's companies with no underlying legal transactions, using the client account as a banking facility contrary to Rule 14.5 SAR, plus AML monitoring/EDD failures. First Respondent William Osmond admitted breaches including a lack of integrity (Principle 2) - but NO dishonesty was alleged or found; he was suspended 12 months with indefinite practising restrictions and ordered to pay £50,000 costs. Second Respondent Paul Flaherty (COLP/COFA) allowed the payments by relying on assurances of his co-partner without further enquiry; his misconduct was moderately serious and he was fined £5,001.00 and ordered to pay £15,000 costs. No dishonesty was found against either respondent.

Duties found breached:

Aggravating factors:

  • Misconduct continued over a period of more than three years
  • Large number and high value of transactions (approx £30 million through client account)
  • First Respondent's misconduct was deliberate, calculated and repeated
  • Abuse of position of trust/authority as owner/manager
  • First Respondent was an experienced solicitor (admitted 1979)
  • First Respondent's prior disciplinary history: 1995 (two-year suspension for Accounts Rules breach) and 2015 (£10,000 fine for being 'less than wholly frank' on oath)
  • Second Respondent acted in breach of his obligations as COFA and director over nearly three years

Mitigating factors:

  • No loss caused to any client or third party
  • No evidence Respondents profited from the misconduct
  • First Respondent stopped payments and returned funds once informed of Rule 14.5 by accountants
  • Second Respondent relied on assurances of his trusted co-partner of over 10 years
  • Second Respondent had no previous regulatory history
  • Second Respondent took his COLP/COFA roles seriously in other respects; conduct limited to four matter files

Codes & rules applied

Documents

Source: https://solicitorstribunal.org.uk/case/12647/