Boss admits he had no law degree

The chief executive of a legal firm who stepped down after an internal investigation into his qualifications has admitted he does not have a law degree as claimed.

But Michael Vukcevic says he "did not seek to mislead" his former employer Baldwins, which specialises in intellectual property law, and the Auckland firm never promoted him as a qualified lawyer.

A Herald investigation revealed yesterday that the 43-year-old, described as an experienced business leader with a proven track record, does not have a Bachelor of Laws (LLB) as stated on the curriculum vitae he submitted for the chief executive role in late 2011.

He resigned from Baldwins in November for "personal reasons" after an internal employment inquiry also discovered he did not complete the legal qualification at Victoria University as claimed.

Victoria University has raised questions as to how Baldwins - and the recruitment company which put him forward for the role - did not properly vet his credentials.

"Qualifications awarded by a university are a matter of public record and employers should check this as part of an appointment process," said Professor Penny Boumelha, deputy vice-chancellor.

"The university in-house solicitor will be writing to Mr Vukcevic today reminding him that all graduates must accurately represent their qualifications. At this stage, we are not planning to make a complaint to the police."

Cook Executive Recruitment handled the applications for the role at Baldwins but director Tim Cook declined to discuss what checks were made on Mr Vukcevic and referred the Herald to Baldwins.

Phone calls to Baldwins chairwoman Sue Ironside for comment were redirected to Piet de Jong, who works for PR firm Baldwin Boyle.

"Michael Vukcevic resigned from his employment at Baldwins for personal reasons in November last year. And the company has nothing further to add on the matter. That's our position," said Mr de Jong.

Mr Vukcevic, who has worked closely with government ministers and agencies negotiating free trade agreements in the Middle East, released a statement yesterday confirming he does not hold a law degree "from any university in New Zealand and have never worked in a legal role".

He said he didn't seek to mislead Baldwins, his appointment didn't involve legal work and he'd never been held out as a lawyer in any website profile.

The statement does not explain how or why his CV states he obtained the law degree.

Michelle Boag, executive adviser to the Middle East Business Council of which Mr Vukcevic is the chairman, said the revelations yesterday were a "storm in a tea cup".

Mr Vukcevic had never claimed to have a law degree when dealing with the council, she said.

"As I understand it, he should have had the word 'incomplete' next to LLB. Having said that, I don't know why it wasn't there," she told RadioLive. "This is a voluntary board, people are nominated and elected. Like all council members, he's a volunteer, he receives no benefits from the work that he does."

- by Jared Savage of the NZ Herald

Add a Comment