Morning round-up: Monday 12 October

Avatar photo

By Legal Cheek Reporter on

The morning’s top legal affairs news stories

newspapers4

Some of the UK’s top former judges and lawyers have criticised the government response to the migrant crisis [BBC News]

Labour law chief’s £2million human rights hypocrisy: Lord Falconer represents torture state of Djibouti in court [Mail Online]

Michael Gove took inspiration from Texas rehabilitation programmes for prison reform plans [The Independent]

Bao Zhuoxuan, teenage son of prominent Chinese human rights lawyer, is missing [Sydney Morning Herald]

ANC plans to withdraw South Africa from international criminal court [The Guardian]

Monty Python legal battle left me living in a bedsit, says “seventh Python” [The Guardian]

Five lawyers disciplined by Scottish Law Society over deals which could mask mortgage fraud … but none reported to prosecutors [Daily Record]

A court has ruled that Bikram Choudhury can’t copyright his yoga poses [Time]

Aerosmith singer Steven Tyler sends Donald Trump a cease-and-desist letter [Fortune]

Wife, 84, files for divorce from hubby, 88, on grounds of lack of sex [Daily Star]

Shearman & Sterling winter vacation scheme applications are open [Legal Cheek Hub]

“Given that he is the UK’s supreme judicial authority and ranked above the Supreme Court, you can always appeal to Judge Rinder.” [Legal Cheek Comments]