Lilly King

Solicitor
Contact details

0118 982 2529

LinkedIn

Lilly is a Solicitor within the Professional Regulatory team, providing advice in areas of professional discipline and fitness to practise, specialising in healthcare regulation.

Main areas of practice

Lilly has a wide range of experience in professional discipline and fitness to practise. Lilly regularly advises and acts for professional regulator clients in respect of fitness to practise investigations into allegations related to conduct and competence. Lilly has acted on numerous professional conduct investigations, including complex cases involving matters of dishonesty, health, and misconduct. Lilly has experience of preparing disciplinary cases for first instance tribunals through to cases before the High Court.

Clients

Lilly’s client base consists of primarily professional regulatory bodies, with a particular focus on healthcare regulator clients. Lilly has acted for many key healthcare regulators, including the Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC), the Health and Care Professions Council (HCPC), and the General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC).

Expertise

Career

Lilly was awarded a Bachelor of Laws Degree with First Class Honours (LLB) and a Master of Laws with Distinction (LLM LPC) at The University of Law, London.

Lilly joined Blake Morgan in 2020. As part of her Training Contract, Lilly’s previous experience included Seats in Corporate, Commercial Litigation, Banking & Finance and Employment. She qualified as a Solicitor in March 2025.

Contact details

0118 982 2529

LinkedIn

Insights by Lilly


articles

16 December - Lilly King

What holiday pay rules apply to temporary workers? We examine the ruling in Deksne v Ambitions Ltd 2024, which looks at the issues employers need to be aware of.

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articles

12 June - Lilly King

We previously considered how the High Court in Avanti adopted a more nuanced approach to determining whether charges were fixed or floating (click here to read). In the recent case of...

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articles

13 February - Lilly King

In principle, yes. When someone publishes untrue material online that adversely affects another person’s reputation, they could be found liable for defamation. The term defamation covers libel and slander. In this...

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