Law Society Attack on Kopyto Steps Into High Gear

October 18, 2011

Prosecutors Crack Whip over Blight Panel

The Law Society case against Kopyto is proceeding full steam ahead. Multiple hearing dates and witnesses against him have been lined up. Investigator Adrian Greenaway (a savvy ex-cop) is on the stand. On top of all this, public access to the hearings may be at threat.

The wind is in the Prosecutors’ sails. The Divisional Court decided October 11, 2011 to back up the Law Society Hearing Panel chaired by Margot Blight for refusing to hear Harry’s challenge to its jurisdictional authority.

Harry argues that the Panel functions as part of a scheme that denies affordable justice. He argues that the Blight Panel’s authority derives from a constitutionally flawed statute.  By-law 4 of the Law Society Act restricts access to affordable justice by allowing lawyers to govern their more affordable paralegal competitors. Already, the scope of practice of paralegals has been dramatically shredded by the By-law. Just another hostile takeover by a price-fixing monopoly.

The Law Society prosecutors were cracking their whips fast and furious over the Blight Panel’s heads on Thursday October 13, 2011.  There is a new bounce in their footsteps.  All of Harry’s prehearing motions, except some of his demands for disclosure, have been denied unanimously by the Panel.  The initiative is now with the prosecution.

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Mobilize for Kopyto’s Court Appearance Next Tuesday October 11, 2011

October 6, 2011

Harry Kopyto’s fate as a legal advocate may be decided by three Judges of the Divisional Court in courtroom 3, Osgoode Hall in Toronto next Tuesday, October 11th at 10:00 a.m.  This is the single most important hearing in his two year plus struggle to stop Big Law from crushing his professional bones.  All those who have watched him battle three lawyer-appointed panels since 2009 are asked to flood the court benches to show the Judges that Harry does not stand alone.

If he wins, Big Law’s takeover of paralegals will be put on trial for denying public access to affordable legal services, a constitutional right.  If he loses, the Law Society will start calling witnesses two days later on Thursday October 13th at 9:30 a.m. at Osgoode Hall’s Museum Room to besmirch his character.

The stakes are high.  The Panel judging Harry’s character, headed by Margot Blight, cowardly ducked Harry’s demand to be judged by a Panel independent of lawyers whose financial interests clash with the public interest and constitutional right to affordable justice.  Blight’s rationale?  Harry’s challenge was too complicated for the Panel to deal with.  Who then will decide the issue?

No one wants to admit that the emperor is naked.  But, at least, Harry should have the right to argue his point. That is all he will ask of the three Judges on Tuesday.  Will he get the right to challenge the takeover law?  Will he be given the right to be judged by a publicly-appointed Panel instead of the backroom boys who are already greasing the noose?

So far, the game has been fixed. Big Law plays with loaded dice. It makes its own rules. If Harry loses his court application on Tuesday, his professional days will be numbered.  However, the courts may decide that forcing the Law Society to give Harry a fair hearing will not bring down the sky.  After all, they have their own image to burnish.

Harry has never needed visible support more than now! Witness the hearing. Help ensure justice is done. Join us next Tuesday. Harry needs us more then ever.

Harry Kopyto Defence Committee


Kopyto heads to Divisional Court on October 11, 2011

September 28, 2011

LAW SOCIETY PANEL DUCKS ISSUE OF ITS INDEPENDENCE

 

Will the courts force the Law Society to rule on Harry Kopyto’s challenge to the Law Society’s takeover of the paralegal profession?  That question will be answered by three judges in Courtroom 3 at Osgoode Hall at 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday October 11, 2011.

Harry’s appearance before the Divisional Court comes at a turning point in the Law Society’s campaign to shut down his paralegal practice.  His constitutional challenge to the takeover came at the conclusion of 20 days of motions before three different Law Society hearing panels over a two-year period.  Kopyto had to fight tooth and nail to force the Law Society to disgorge a mountain of dossiers they maintained on his legal activities.

But the Law Society Panel, headed by Margot Blight and appointed by lawyers, refused to rule on his constitutional challenge to their authority to rule on his good character citing “institutional incompetence” as the reason.  Instead, the Panel set several days for the hearing of evidence to establish Kopyto’s lack of good character which he needs to prove to continue his 22-year career as a paralegal.  Thus, Kopyto’s move to the Divisional Court’s Courtroom 3 in the austere West Wing of Osgoode Hall from the Law Society’s cloistered nest in the East Wing of the building comes at a critical time in his battle to stop lawyers from neutering their rival paralegal competitors.

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KOPYTO Refutes Law Times Article

August 29, 2011

The Harry Kopyto Defence Committee is posting below an article written by Michael McKiernan posted July 15, 2011 in the Law Times widely read by members of the legal profession.

In his article, Kopyto hits another roadblock, McKiernan makes a number of observations that deserve a response.

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Harry Kopyto is Going to the Superior Court

August 13, 2011

Harry follows Blight’s advice

Harry Kopyto wants an answer.  He wants to know where he can challenge the independence of the Hearing Panel that is deciding if he has the good character to continue working as a paralegal. Is that a lot to ask?  Not really, no. In fact, the Panel agrees that he deserves an answer.  It agrees he should get someone to hear his objection. But not us, they tell him. Why?  Because they just can’t handle his challenge to its authority. Oh yes, they agree that they are “implicated” in his argument that they function as part of a constitutionally flawed regulatory scheme. But they also say that they are not “institutionally competent” to hear his motion.  How come?  They’re smart people.  After all, they know the ropes.  Blight even advises major corporations and the Ontario government. Anyway, they recommend he take his issue to the courts.  And Harry, who is an agreeable fellow by nature, is following their advice.

Basically, Harry has asked Blight to disqualify the Panel. He argues that the Panel is not legitimate.  It is not independent.  It was appointed by lawyers. Lawyers have a conflict with the Law Society’s mandate to serve the public interest.  Paralegals used to do much of the same work lawyers do.  And cheaper.  So lawyers took control of paralegals. They carved out the most lucrative work paralegals were previously allowed to do exclusively for themselves. They barred paralegals from doing everything else.  The Law Society is run by lawyers.  It’s just another monopoly engaged in a hostile takeover.  In price-fixing.  In abuse of a dominant position in the marketplace.  In eliminating its own more affordable competition.  At whose expense was this done?  At the expense of the public’s access to affordable justice.

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Kopyto fights for procedural fairness

July 12, 2011

Harry’s Security and Liberty Interest at Stake

 

On July 7, 2011, the Blight Panel sitting at Osgoode Hall concluded its tenth and likely last day of sittings on preliminary motions brought by Harry Kopyto since January in the proceedings brought by the Law Society (LSUC) to convince the Panel’s three members that he has does not have the good character needed to continue working as a paralegal.

 

Harry argued before the Panel that it had to be certain of its assessment of his character and not base their decision on evidence that was only probably reliable.  He also asked the Panel to place the burden of proof that he lacked good character on the Law Society giving him a presumption of innocence similar to the one in the criminal courts.  Kopyto is seeking a ruling that the existing law devised by the LSUC lawyer-appointed panels which denies him such protection, is inapplicable in his case because of his unique situation which requires “fundamental justice” as guaranteed by the Charter.

 

His argument was that these procedural safeguards are justified because of the seriousness of the personal consequences of a refusal to allow him to continue to work as a legal advocate.  He argued that s. 7 of the Charter of Rights protects his “liberty” interest which guarantees freedom and autonomy to make personal choices of fundamental importance in his life. He also argued that the right to “security” of the person protects him from serious psychological harm and infringement of his identity that would befall him if the Panel denied him the right to continue his lifelong pursuit of justice through legal advocacy.

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The clock ticking down on Kopyto v Law Society – Thursday July 7th at Osgoode Hall

June 28, 2011

Kopyto faces the Law Society (LSUC) again on Thursday July 7, 2011 at 9:30 a.m. at Osgoode Hall, Museum Room.  As before, he will appear before the three-person panel headed by Margot Blight which will determine if he has the good character to continue working as a paralegal.

 

The July 7th hearing will deal with the final pretrial motion to be brought by Harry.  Most of his motions have been argued over several days of hearings held during the last winter and spring.  Some additional motions were deferred to be dealt with after the hearing of the evidence against him. The disclosure motions brought by Harry were almost entirely decided in his favour after the prosecution stonewalled the production of documents vital to Harry’s defence for almost two years.

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Law Society Panel Hears Kopyto, but is it listening?

May 24, 2011

Law Society design of By-law 4 contains conflict of interest

Will Margot Blight even allow Harry Kopyto to challenge the hostile takeover of the paralegal profession by their competing profession of lawyers?  The tag team of two lawyers assigned by Big Law to bury him professionally is trying to block him from arguing his challenge to the law that authorized the takeover.  It may succeed. And Harry may appeal.

The three-person Blight panel spent most of the last two hearing days (April 27th and May 9th 2011) listening to arguments on this issue back and forth. The legal issue is all about the Panel’s jurisdiction.  Harry argued that the design of the takeover law was flawed.  This law permits lawyers (42,000 of them) to elect 40 or so Law Society (LSUC) Directors (Benchers) every four years, while the 3,500 paralegals like him who have been forced to join the LSUC have no say. Harry and his fellow paralegals are nothing more than a disenfranchised internal colony of their competing profession who decide whether he and his colleagues can continue to work as paralegals.  Who suffers from this monopoly over legal services? The public. In whose name is this fraud perpetrated?  Why, “the public interest”, of course.

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Kopyto takes on LSUC Paralegal Takeover Law on Monday May 9th

May 5, 2011

Last Wednesday April 27, 2011, a three-person Law Society (LSUC) Hearing Panel met to hear arguments concerning a LSUC prosecutors’ motion to block Harry Kopyto’s challenge to the law which forced him and thousands of other paralegals to be placed under the control of their competitors — lawyers.

The LSUC’s prosecutors argued that the takeover law was a “political issue”.  They accused Harry of believing in “a conspiracy by lawyers against paralegals”. They argued that his challenge to the law had nothing to do with assessing his good character which the Panel had been appointed to judge to allow him to continue his paralegal practice.  They sought to finally block his constitutional challenge to By-law 4 passed under the Law Society Act which enables the LSUC to stop Harry from working as a paralegal.  As Harry has already qualified to continue working as a paralegal under the LSUC rules in all other respects, the Panel is basically functioning as an admissions Panel.

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Tick-tock-tick-tock – LSUC attack on Kopyto bearing down – next round May 9 @ 9:30am

May 4, 2011

Harry Kopyto is back before the Law Society Hearing Panel on Monday May 9, 2011 at 9:30 a.m., in the Museum Room, Osgoode Hall in downtown Toronto.

The Law Society is trying to block the Blight panel from hearing his constitutional challenge to overturn the hostile takeover law. This law gives lawyers control over their paralegal competitors.  The public suffers from this price-fixing monopoly which restricts access to affordable justice.

The Law Society is vulnerable. The law is on Harry’s side. The LSUC prosecutors know this. This is why they brought a pre-emptive strike motion.

Blight claims that she will be fair to Harry. Will she keep her promise?  Be there to show the Panel that the public supports Harry’s right to argue his case.


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