The top legal affairs news stories from the weekend
London mayor Sadiq Khan calls for second Brexit vote [BBC News]
We are heading for a car crash Brexit under Theresa May’s Chequers plan [The Telegraph]
Katie Hopkins applies for insolvency agreement to avoid bankruptcy after libel loss [The Guardian]
Feuding neighbours spent a combined £120,000 in legal fees in dispute over 2ft strip of parking space [The Sun]
Adviser uncovers solicitor’s £19k error [FT Adviser]
No-fault divorces planned in major shake-up of “archaic law” [Evening Standard]
Joe Robinson: Turkish court convicts former UK soldier [BBC News]
Money-laundering hack and Japanese law could threaten a wipeout of Bitcoin [The Telegraph]
The High Court found that Vote Leave broke the law in a new way [Open Democracy]
Kavanaugh allegations revive fervor over crucial Supreme Court pick [CNN]
The rise of Dublin as a global legal centre — with Pinsent Masons, Dechert, Matheson and Barbri [Legal Cheek Hub]
BPTC and LPC graduates sought to work as county court advocates [Legal Cheek Hub]
“…no one talks about this in the office because that would risk losing their job. But I am willing to bet lots of lawyers voted for Brexit or voted for Corbyn.” [Legal Cheek Comments]