Disgraced lawyer Phil Shiner (Image: PA)

Disgraced former human rights lawyer Phil Shiner admits Iraq War legal aid fraud

Birmingham-based ex-solicitor was the face of Public Interest Lawyers but was struck off in 2017

by · Birmingham Live

Birmingham-based former human rights lawyer Philip Shiner has pleaded guilty to fraud charges linked to claims made against Iraq War veterans. Shiner, 67, appeared at Southwark Crown Court yesterday, Monday, September 30, to plead guilty to three counts of fraud, the National Crime Agency (NCA) said.

He is due to be sentenced on December 2. Shiner, of Birmingham, was the principal solicitor of the law firm Public Interest Lawyers.

He made an application to the Legal Services Commission in 2007 in which he sought up to £200,000 of legal aid funding for his firm to represent clients including Khuder Al-Sweady, in an application for judicial review.

According to the NCA, he received around £3 million in the value of the contract and the ensuing Al-Sweady inquiry cost the tax payer £24 million. In making his application, Shiner failed to disclose an agent acting on his behalf and with his knowledge had been cold calling and making unsolicited approaches to potential clients in Iraq.

Shiner, who was previously struck from the roll of solicitors in 2017, also failed to disclose he was paying referral fees. This practice was not permitted as part of gaining a legal aid contract, the NCA said.

He was also convicted of providing a witness statement to the Commission in support of his application which was again gained via an unsolicited approach. As a result of his failure to disclose this information, Shiner was able to gain a “valuable legal aid contract to enable him to pursue the judicial review”, the NCA said.

Andy Kelly, head of the NCA’s International Corruption Unit said: “This conviction is a milestone in what has been a thorough and complex domestic and international investigation. Shiner’s actions resulted in untold pressure and anxiety on members of the British Armed Forces, pursuing legal challenges funded through dishonest actions.”