Latest Articles

TAKING RISK: THE ROLE OF LAWYERS AND BANKERS IN CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT AND MITIGATION FOR COMMERCIAL BANKS

Banking and risk are inseparable counterparts in the financial system of the economy of every country. While everything possible may be done by bankers and the regulators of the banking sector to reduce the effect of excessive risk-tasking, credit obviously includes the risk of loss. It is in fact risk that is the rationale for a lending bank’s returns (profit) usually measured in interest rate spreads. Like in many spheres of life, risk can neither be avoided nor totally eradicated. It is proper planning and execution that holds the key to a banker’s success; because, like Pierre Corneille (1604-1684) once wrote, “to conquer without risk is to triumph without glory”.

Environmental damage in the context of international criminal law

It is now two years since the ‘Independent Expert Panel for the Legal Definition of Ecocide’ . Since then there has been much discussion about whether a new crime of ecocide should be created within the framework of the International Criminal Court Rome Statute.

MISUSE OF INFORMATION IN THE CIVIL AND PUBLIC SERVICE: LEGAL IMPLICATIONS AND POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS

Wrongful communication otherwise referred to as leaks or divulging in both the Civil and public service can taint the integrity of any organisation or institution. Information used in policy making and administration are deemed confidential and treated with utmost priority

Practical Challenges and Effective Measures to Detecting, Investigating and Prosecuting High-Profile Transnational Organised Crime in Sierra Leone. Case Study: Detection and Investigation of the Cessna Plane in Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone has been in political turmoil which climaxed to a civil war that lasted from 1991-2001. The devastating war left the country not only politically unstable as a result of the millions of people who were killed, raped and amputated but left the people impoverished and vulnerable. The economic and political instability in the country made it become more attractive to organized criminals who used corrupt government officials including the vulnerability and susceptibility of the people to enhance their ill-gotten gains.

A Review of Sierra Leone’s Laws on Mortgages

The law of mortgages in Sierra Leone is the product of the common law, equity, and statutes. The common law is the body of customary law, based upon judicial decisions and embodied in reports of decided cases, that has been administered by the common-law courts of England [and its former colonies, the Republic of Sierra Leone being one]. The Common Law is recognised under the laws of Sierra Leone by virtue of Section 170(2) of the Constitution of Sierra Leone, Act No. 6 of 1991.

The Court of Appeal – A path to consolidation, convalescence and recovery!

This offering attempts to capture the legal framework of the Court of Appeal of Sierra Leone tracing its constitutional and factual composition, mentioning also some of its existing processes whilst exploring ideas and recommendations that may provide alternatives which may strengthen the court and generally make it a more effective adjudicating forum. Whilst some of the ideas flow from the experience and practices in other jurisdictions the bulk of them are informed by the author's appreciation of the existing rules as well as his experience appearing before the court as a legal practitioner and later sitting as a member.

An Appraisal on the Distinctions and Similarities between the Offences of Strict Liability and Vicarious Liability: Making a Case against the Recognition of Vicarious Liability in the Criminal Law of Sierra Leone

To start with, there are a number of distinctions between vicarious liability and strict liability offences. Vicarious liability and strict liability offences are part of the offences criminalised under the criminal law of Sierra Leone. It is noteworthy that by virtue of Section 74 of the Courts Act, of the Republic of Sierra Leone, the Courts of Sierra Leone are allowed to use the common law of England, doctrines and principles of Equity, and Statutes of General Application in force in England before the 1st Day of January 1880.1 However, where such common law is used, it merely has persuasive authority as opposed to binding legal authority. This is primarily why this literature cited such authorities and such other case laws from jurisdictions with analogous common law legal systems like Sierra Leone.

The challenges that the ICC Prosecutor may face in presenting charges on the crime of aggression in the Russia-Ukraine situation

The crime of aggression presupposes that an aggressive act has been committed by a State.1 Russia’s pernicious attack on Ukraine, violates the most sacred principle in international law, being the territorial integrity and political independence of all states. International law is crystal clear and absolute: a state is prohibited from the use or threat of force against another state; every such use, regardless of gravity or aims, constitutes a violation