For anyone paying attention, there have numerous such cases in the news in the last couple of years. The handling of probate and inheritances seems to be a particularly murky one, since the beneficiaries never get a clear picture of what they were entitled to. As Bronte said, the law society are looking after their own, first and only. Self-regulation in the legal profession is a complete farce, especially since mounting a challenge is nigh on impossible.
The judiciary who are drawn from the same ranks are in on it too. In the most egregious cases that do make it to court, a solicitor will often be slapped on the wrists and put under the supervision of another solicitor temporarily. This is in cases that are quite plainly screaming out for jail time. They need to apply the same criteria that the Revenue Commissioners would to you or me if we "accidentally" slipped up in our accounting.
I hasten to say there is no evidence that solicitors
generally are a bunch of crooks. But equally clearly from recent cases, a subset of them
are. Crooks should not be self-regulated. It's the most basic, glaringly obvious fact. But then, who has the independence and the technical competence to do it? That's a tricky one. The ODCE spring to mind, with it's well-funded hordes of competent professionals and crack team of investigators.
