The principle enunciated in the title of the entertaining article «Judge not that ye be judged» (see NLJ, 26 January 2007, p 146) by Geoffrey Bindman ought to be compulsory reading for those who so eagerly find fault with solicitors in
the various arms of the Law Society and beyond — especially, the new regulator who wants more, not less, complaints.
Each
of the
arms of government can check each other but not in the way
of the President or any other person saying after a court
of law has delivered a judgment and set free an accused person on bail, after looking at the
various factor for the grant
of bail, including severity
of the punishment, including the weight
of the alleged crime, including whether the accused person would jump bail or not, including whether you would produce surety or not, including whether he has health challenges or not, and the court has finally weighed all these and decided that the accused person must go on bail upon fulfillment
of certain condition
of bail.