Police responding to reports of a fight were stunned when a "significant bulge" in the trousers of one of the feuding pair turned out to be a snake. The drunk 19-year-old was stopped by police following reports he was acting aggressively towards another man in Darmstadt, Germany.
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Computers are being trained to solve problems by bingeing on episodes of a popular TV crime drama. Scientists from the University of Edinburgh mapped footage, script and background sounds from five seasons of Crime Scene Investigation (CSI) into a machine-readable format. The data was fed into a com
The November edition of the Scottish Civil Justice Council (SCJC) newsletter is now available. Issue 12 includes information on committee work & membership, recent rules and consultations.
Thompsons has promoted Seonaid Brophy (pictured right) from the union accident team and Jillian Merchant (pictured below) from the firm’s employment law department to associate level. Ms Brophy joined Thompsons in 2012 after completing the Diploma. She started her traineeship in the lung disease t
Scotland is to become the only part of the UK with statutory targets to tackle child poverty after the Child Poverty (Scotland) Bill was unanimously passed by the Scottish Parliament.The bill will:
The Faculty of Advocates has raised some questions about a working draft of the Contract (Formation) (Scotland) Bill which has been prepared by the Scottish Law Commission. In its response to a consultation on the draft, the Faculty said: “When reading this draft Bill as a whole, it appears to us
A man caught hiding bullets in his home told Irish police he was out of breath and sweating when they arrived because he had been "having a w**k". Gardaí, who suspected he was attempting to flee or to hide something, said they did not accept his explanation.
An Iraqi Kurd who was refused asylum, humanitarian protection and human rights protection in the UK has had an application for leave to appeal rejected. A judge in the Court of Session ruled that there were “no errors of law” which were “strongly arguable” and therefore the application fell
Angela Constance
Donald MacKinnon Law At Work Ltd (LAW) has achieved accreditation with the Scottish Living Wage Accreditation Initiative, as a Living Wage employer.
More than 60 members of the Egyptian Parliament have proposed a law that will criminalise same-sex sexual activity in the country for the first time. The draft law, the latest development since the Egyptian authorities launched an LGBTI-related crackdown after a rainbow flag was displayed at a conce
A man found guilty of murder who claimed that he acted in “self-defence” of a friend who he feared was about to be attacked has had an appeal against his conviction rejected. The Appeal Court of the High Court of Justiciary ruled that the appellant’s plea of “third party provocation” could
The Law Society of England and Wales has said courts should be allowed to recognise informal wills as an expression of people's final wishes. The society made the proposal in a submission to the Law Commission, which is currently concluding a consultation on will reform, the Law Society Gazette repo
The Pope has banned the sale of cigarettes at the Vatican because it is not "legitimate" to profit from something that harms public health. In a statement, the Vatican said Pope Francis had "decided that the Vatican will cease to sell cigarettes to employees as of 2018".
Shona McCusker