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After the lawyer unrest, Tamil Nadu has to brace itself for more shocks on the legal front. In an alarming revelation, the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry has said that more than 7,000 lawyers on its rolls could be bogus, and their certificates fake.
The ongoing verification of certificates, being done as mandated by the Bar Council of India and Madras HC, has exposed three types of fraud.
In one, thousands of certificates are missing and the persons ‘enrolled’ on the basis of these certificates are either untraceable or not responding to the Bar Council’s letters.
In the second, officials have stumbled upon bogus certificates during certificate verification, and police complaints have been filed.
There is a third category of people who have done law on the basis of their ‘direct’ masters degree (MA) under the open university scheme, which is not permissible as per a Supreme Court ruling.
Although Tamil Nadu and Puducherry have a combined lawyer strength of 90,000 on record, only 16,000 have submitted their certificates for verification, said Bar Council of Tamil Nadu, Puducherry Chairman D Selvam.
“We have found that more than 2,000 files of enrolled candidates ‘missing’ for the period between 1961 and 1985. For the period from 1985 to 2016 several hundred more cases of ‘missing’ documents are expected,’’ said S Prabakaran, Co-Chairman of Bar Council of India (BCI).
“We suspect that many of these lawyers fuel the ongoing lawyers’ unrest for their own safety,” he said.
Worried by high incidence of bogus lawyers, the BCI directed all state Bar councils to verify certificates of new candidates as well as those who had already been enrolled. On 21 August 2015, the bench of Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul passed a judicial order asking the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry to verify documents.
Previously, The Bar Council of India suspended 126 lawyers of Tamil Nadu and prohibited them from practising in any court or tribunal in the country pursuant to its warning that it will suspend those who indulge in boycott and other activities.
The JAC had said they would not allow anyone, not even judges, to enter the campus. The next morning, lawyers gathered for a protest outside the Indian Oil station opposite China Bazaar, a kilometre away from the Madras High Court.
Heavy police presence marked the area, with police outnumbering the protesting lawyers at around 9:30 am. Slogans of “Bar Council down down” and “CJ Kaul down down” could be heard, with the protesting lawyers demanding that the Chief Justice, Sanjay Kishan Kaul, step down from his post.
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