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The Danger of Wetherspoon Motorway Pub Plans

Pub chain JD Wetherspoon have announced plans to open their first motorway pub at service stations on the M40, after being given the go ahead for services at Junction 2, near Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire.

The pub will be open 24 hours and will have a licence to serve alcohol from 8am-1am seven days a week.  It is expected to be open by Christmas, and JD Wetherspoon freely admit that they will not be asking whether customers are driving before serving them.

Public reactions have fallen into two extreme camps – firstly, the people who are horrified at the prospect and see it as a truly reckless decision, and then those who are pleased with the news and see it as no problem at all.

“If you can’t trust yourself to resist drinking when you’re driving, you shouldn’t be driving!” I saw someone write on a social networking site, and that tends to sum up the attitude of the people who are pleased about the announcement.

There will be lots of people who will enjoy a drink in the pub quite safely – passengers, stag and hen parties and sporting teams being ferried around in minibuses, lorry drivers who have parked for the night and want a drink with their evening meal.

But what about the binge drinkers, the other side cry?  The alcoholics and the idiots?

What the public don’t realise is that those people are a small minority, and that any dedicated alcoholic has been finding creative ways to drink mid-journey for a long time.

Will the introduction of a motorway pub lead to an increase in drink driving incidents?

Absolutely.

My concern with these plans is that the most common problematic scenario is being ignored, as people either imagine all-day drinkers then getting behind the wheel, or focus on being allowed a glass of red when it’s the Mrs’ turn to drive.

Somewhere in the middle, is the ordinary person my firm represents every day, who is a good person of a responsible nature, who makes a misjudgement.

This person is not a binge drinker, an alcoholic or an idiot – there are fewer of those around than you’d imagine.

What there are a lot of, though, is people who can make a mistake.  People who may decide to have a leisurely few drinks over dinner, lunch, or a business meeting.  People who will say ‘yes’ to that extra drink that puts them over the limit.  Lorry drivers who relax with a few beers after a particularly stressful day, then set off the next morning still over the limit.  People who are passengers and decide to have a couple to drink – only for their designated driver to begin to feel ill and ask them to take over the driving.  People who are sharing the driving on a long journey and decide they’ll be ok to have a couple as it’s not their turn to drive again for a couple of hours.

These people are my concern.

People just like me, and you.

An Open Letter To Motoring Solicitors from Forrest Williams

Dear Motoring Solicitors,

Allow me to introduce myself.

My name is Katie Forrest, and I have a dual role here at Forrest Williams.

As well as maintaining a full paralegal role, I am also the Business Development Manager.  This is deliberate: we believe that to develop a business you have to understand the business.  And so, I work on our business and in our business.

As Business Development Manager, I am always looking for ways of improving our business and increasing the clients we serve and the products and services we offer.

There are limitations to this, though.

Whilst we are a business, and have to make a profit in order to not only pay our own expenses and staff’s salaries, but also to remain in business and therefore to be able to help more people in the future, we also have an obligation to do the right thing.

The vast majority of people who ring us have little to no legal knowledge.  They see us as the legal experts, and they trust that what we tell them is correct.

I’m writing this open letter as a personal plea to some motoring solicitors who I know are not taking this obligation seriously enough.

I’d like to share the story of Miss K.  Miss K rang us recently facing a drink driving charge.  She was distraught.  We invested a great deal of time in reassuring her and discussing the best way forward for her.  She was quick to accept that she ‘held her hands up’, and she wanted to plead guilty and have strong mitigation presented to the Court to help her come away with the shortest disqualification.

Our role for her was one of damage limitation, as it is for many people.

The disqualification would have a devastating effect for Miss K, who owns a business and employs staff.  The consequences would affect not only her, but her business and her employees.

It was a serious case, and Miss K was grateful for the time we spent supporting her and advising her.

We had her advocate selected, her date in our diary, and then…

… she rang and cancelled her instructions to us.

She had gone elsewhere.

She had initially rang around several companies, and one of those motoring firms had called her some time after her initial discussion with them, and by which time she had instructed us to represent her.

This firm advised Miss K that she should plead not guilty and that they had a 100% success rate of winning cases like hers.  They virtually promised her that she would be found not guilty and would avoid a disqualification.

They advised this where no defence existed.  I can’t say it without sounding egotistical, but trust me, my firm know the defences.  If there is one there, we will find it.

Miss K, as a woman desperate to avoid a disqualification for her sake and the sake of her employees, took this opportunity and instructed this other firm.

I don’t mind that a client chose to go elsewhere.  I regularly advise callers to ring around several firms, and instruct the firm who they feel most comfortable with.  I do not aim to have every person who calls us become a client – some won’t be able to afford our prices, others will simply feel more comfortable with other firms for whatever reason.

What I mind, is that Miss K has been led to believe that she should plead not guilty when she shouldn’t.

Unfortunately, she isn’t alone.  I hear many callers tell me, “I’ve spoken to another firm and they’ve promised me I’ll be found not guilty”.

Not all motoring firms do this, of course.  There are some excellent firms out there who I know are committed to providing accurate advice.

But there is a small number of firms who seem to advise all callers that a not guilty plea is appropriate.  They tell these callers that they have access to expert witnesses, that they have loopholes other firms don’t know about, that they have strong success rates and don’t even need to see the client’s paperwork to virtually guarantee them being found not guilty.

Those firms know who they are, and it is those firms I would like to speak to and ask, why?  Why would you take advantage of desperate people when you are in such a position of trust?  Why would you guarantee success when you know you are not being honest?  Why would you advise clients who – when found guilty – will lose their jobs and income, that they require expert witnesses who will increase their costs without securing them success?

I speak to clients every day and I laugh and cry with them.  I work early and late and spend weekends in the office to prepare their cases at the times easiest for them.  I listen to their stories and I truly care about their lives.

I am honest with them, and I do what is best for them.

Today, for example, I took a call and obtained a new client.  Let me call her Mrs T.  She was devastated to find herself in the position of requiring our help for a drink driving offence.  She cried down the phone to me.

She sent me a detailed statement of the background leading up to the incident, and I sat and cried for her.

I made a call to one of the barristers’ Chambers who my firm work closely with.  I asked if a particular barrister – who I saw just days ago socially – could cover this case, because of his particular personal skills, and I re-arranged my Wednesday so that I could travel to his Chambers to meet with him and the client before the hearing date.

To the firms who are promising the world when they know they can’t deliver, I want to say this:

There is another way.

You can have a profitable business by doing the right thing.  You can have a client be amazingly happy with the outcome of their case even when they plead guilty.  You can build lasting relationships with colleagues and associates – like the barristers who we use time and time again and now consider to be friends – without being taken advantage of.

You can, and should, care so much that the idea of anyone being dishonest to or hurting your clients hurts you too.

And, if you don’t care that much, maybe you’re in the wrong field.  Maybe you need to remember that to each person who calls you, this is the biggest thing going on in their life.  Remember that they are scared, and they need someone to trust.  Someone who will be tough enough to tell them the honest prospects of their case, who will care enough to listen to them cry – and maybe join in; someone who will have the morals to advise them of the best course of action, not the most expensive.

If you don’t bring those things to the field, you shouldn’t be in the field.

Yours,

Katie Forrest

*PRESS RELEASE* Motoring Lawyers Online Rebrand Due To Continued Growth

National Niche Motoring Firm Rebrand Due To Continued Growth

 

‘Motoring Lawyers Online’ Become ‘Forrest Williams’

 

Successful niche motoring law firm Motoring Lawyers Online have invested in a complete rebrand due to their continued growth that sees them re-launch on 28 February 2013 as Forrest Williams.

 

The firm, who successfully represent clients facing all motoring matters across England and Wales, are renowned for their excellent results for clients and their re-brand is a clear sign of their domination of the motoring law field.

 

Steve Williams, principal of the firm, says, “We are undertaking a full rebrand that will include a completely new website and online and offline presence and are investing heavily in making sure it is very clear that we are growing and remain committed to providing the absolute best service to clients nationwide.”

 

The firm, which was launched in 2009 and is the fastest growing motoring law firm, focus on providing excellence across all areas of their work, from unearthing defences for clients to meticulously preparing cases to giving outstanding client care.

 

“My staff and my clients know without a doubt that we are the premier motoring law firm and the rebrand allows us to make that perfectly clear to everyone.”

 

Forrest Williams are based in Nottinghamshire and cover the whole of England and Wales.  Their new website launches on 28 February 2013 at //motoringlawyersonline.com.

 

Forrest Williams can be contacted with any queries on01623 397200.  

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