Tarina Le Boutillier > Carey Olsen > St Helier, Jersey > Lawyer Profile
Carey Olsen Offices
47 ESPLANADE
ST HELIER
JE1 0BD
Jersey
- Firm Profile
- Go to...
Tarina Le Boutillier
Work Department
Employment, Pensions and Incentives
Position
Tarina specialises in employment law, dealing with global, multinational and local clients and advising on all aspects of contentious and non-contentious employment law. As well as employment law, Tarina has a keen interest in and frequently advises on data protection legislation and privacy related matters. She is a member of the International Association of Privacy Practitioners (IAPP) and is CIPP/E and CIPM qualified.
Career
Tarina first joined Carey Olsen’s employment team in 2009, before leaving in 2011 to take up a position as an associate in the employment law team of a leading Australian law firm. Tarina returned to Carey Olsen in 2014. She has been a qualified English solicitor since 2009.
Memberships
She is a member of the International Association of Privacy Practitioners (IAPP) and is CIPP/E and CIPM qualified.
Lawyer Rankings
Jersey > Employment
(Leading associates)Carey Olsen offers a pan-Channel Islands employment practice, advising primarily financial services clients on pensions issues in addition to providing representation across contentious matters including discrimination and unfair dismissal claims. Following Siobhan Riley’s retirement in July 2023, leadership of the practice is split between Huw Thomas, who acts on the spectrum of contentious and non-contentious employment matters, and Alexa Saunders, who oversees the firm’s pensions matters, working alongside Julie Currie. Tarina Le Boutillier runs a broad contentious and non-contentious practice, covering discrimination and immigration matters.
Lawyer Rankings
Top Tier Firm Rankings
- Banking and finance
- Capital markets
- Commercial property
- Corporate and commercial
- Dispute resolution > Dispute resolution
- Employment
- Family
- Investment funds
- Private client, trusts and tax
- Dispute resolution > Regulatory and white-collar crime