Former City lawyer convicted of child abuse struck off

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By Angus Simpson on

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Jailed in 2023

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A former City lawyer has been stuck off the roll following a conviction for chid sex abuse.

Stuart Cottis qualified at Magic Circle firm Freshfields, before spending over eight years at Ashurst, followed by a stint as a senior associate at Eversheds Sutherland from May 2022 to June 2023.

In 2023, while out of work during the pandemic lockdown, Cottis was arrested. He later appeared at Southwark Crown Court, where he admitted to attempting sexual communication with a child and arranging or facilitating a child sex offence. He was sentenced in June 2023 to 36 months in prison and made subject to a sexual harm prevention order for 11 years.

However, just over a year after the first conviction, Cottis was then found guilty of further child sex abuse offences and was sentenced to an additional 10 months imprisonment. He admitted to intentionally touching a child aged between nine and 10 years old and intentionally communicating sexually with a person under 16, according the judgment published by Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT).

The regulator was alerted to Cottis’ misconduct after Ashurst’s compliance officer raised the alarm, followed by a similar report from in-house counsel at Eversheds Sutherland.

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In sentencing Cottis, the Crown Court noted that during lockdown, there was a “marked deterioration” in his mental health, as he was “out of work, isolated and lonely, and drinking too much”. But the judge also noted that Cottis’ “behaviour was only curbed by [his] arrest”.

The SRA did not endorse the mitigation in the sentencing remarks. On reaching an agreed outcome, the SDT judgment found that “there could be no mitigation to minimise the harm” and that “the seriousness of the misconduct was self-evident and no sanction less than a strike off would be sufficient to protect the public and the reputation of the profession”.

Cottis was struck off the roll and ordered to pay £3,870 in costs.

5 Comments

RASSO lawyer

Time for a debate on capital punishment (or at least castration) for child abuse?

Worse than murder in my opinion.

Anon

You really shouldn’t be working in law…

Pongo

So he/she is not allowed an opinion that the majority of the UK population hold?

Who made you dictator?

Anonymous

Surely being sanctioned by the SRA is the ultimate punishment?

Scouser of Counsel

I can see where “RASSO Lawyer” is coming from.

Arguably a person who works in this area of law is best placed to make judgments on the level of harm it does to the victims.

I do Rasso work and agree that, in many cases, the harm, consequences and culpability are indeed worse than in many murder cases.

I would even go so far as to say that, in my opinion, some convicted child rape defendants DESERVE a death penalty.

However, as a matter of principle, I would NOT wish to work within a criminal justice system that practices capital punishment for a number of reasons.

Principally the risk of a mistake being made that can never be rectified, but also the possibility that a jury may be reluctant to convict a defendant who they think is guilty because of the risk of them being sentenced to death.

There are many other reasons, but I think we have to separate what a defendant “deserves” from what the system should be permitted to impose.

For my part, I see no problem with decades-long prison sentences from which a child rape defendant is only released when they’re elderly, incapacitated and harmless, if ever.

That’s my 2d worth, anyway.

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