The morning’s top legal affairs news stories
UK judges to get scientific guides [BBC News]
Dominic Grieve expects climbdown over post-Brexit human rights law [The Guardian]
‘Outsourced workers’ file landmark legal case that could revolutionise employment rights in UK [Independent]
Allen & Overy removed from Four Seasons debt crisis talks over conflict of interest concerns [The Telegraph]
Law Society accreditation scheme advert ‘misled’ public [BBC News]
Law student dodges jail after crashing car into Ayrshire crossing while five times the limit [The Sun]
Apple’s iPhone X assembled by illegal student labour [Financial Times]
The dos and don’ts of writing a personal statement for law [The Guardian]
BPTC & LPC graduates to undertake freelance advocacy work in the County Courts throughout England and Wales [Legal Cheek Hub]
“When people on very high pay complain about those who ‘don’t want to work,’ what they really mean is ‘those who don’t want to be exploited…’” [Legal Cheek comments]