What is a paralegal?
What does a paralegal do?
Basically a
Paralegal is a lawyer's assistant who has been educated in law
and trained to carry out a variety of legal assignments and
legal procedures.
At the basic level
(which this course covers) a lawyer may employ a Paralegal or legal assistant to perform basic
legal tasks such as simple case research, witness statement taking, filing
documents at court in advance of a court case and court trial note
taking.
At a more
responsible level (covered by the Senior Paralegal Course) a Paralegal can be asked to analyse case
papers/evidence, perform document reviews, draft motions and
subpoenas. In the UK Paralegals can be used to actually represent
the solicitor?s client in simple civil court cases. These would be
cases held in the lower courts e.g. before a District Judge in a
County Court or before a Master at the High Court i.e. The Royal
Courts of Justice, London.
Like lawyers
Paralegals can specialize and become of particular value to lawyers
specializing in the same field.
Whilst Paralegals
have traditionally dealt more with procedural law than with
substantive law, more and more lawyers are using them in substantive
legal work.
It should be noted that many Paralegals can also be found
working in legal departments of non law organisations in both the
private and public sectors, e.g. banks, NHS hospitals.
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