Justice Matters

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Practise what we preach

Tracy Ayling QC, an Inner Temple Advocacy Trainer, explains the new and necessary way of cross-examining vulnerable witnesses and the training available to advocates to help them to follow the rules.  

It is true that there are some excellent and informative CPD courses at the end of every year. It is possible to collect your points whilst trying to assimilate rafts of cases and notes, delivered to you by experts in the field. How much of it you retain may be open for debate. 

28 March 2014 / Tracy Ayling KC
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Of The Murder Of Cabin Boys

Paul Marshall on Andrew Mitchell MP v News Group Newspapers Ltd and the stripping of judicial discretion.  

  “‘Sit down!’ roars the captain. “Ye sot and swine, do ye know what ye’ve done? Ye’ve murdered the boy!’  

 Mr Shuan seemed to understand; for he sat down again and put his hand to his brow.  

 ‘Well,’ he said, ‘he brought me a dirty pannikin’  

 At that word, the captain and I and Mr Riach all looked at each other for a second with a kind of frightened look….”  

14 March 2014 / Paul Marshall
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A Tribute to Lord Judge

Counsel’s consultant editor, David Wurtzel, pays a tribute to the former Lord Chief Justice and looks back at the contribution he has made to the Bar, the law and the country.  

It was Hugh Davies QC who summarised Lord Judge’s tenure as Lord Chief Justice as “beyond the brilliance and clarity of his judgments and progressive thinking in the vulnerable witness area, it is his appreciation of the changing culture in how trials should work and the respective roles and duties of judges/counsel. Directions to the jury on rape myths; and understanding of modern crime such as cyber and organised sexual offending against children. He is often more progressive in all this than the counsel who claim to be ‘front line’.” 

22 February 2014 / David Wurtzel
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21st Century Slavery

Slavery and trafficking are now the leading and most profitable international criminal enterprises, outstripping both drugs and fraud. Lewis Power QC and Ross Talbott explore the problem and the steps being taken against these crimes.  

Today’s human rights abusers commonly hide behind entrenched cultural idiosyncrasy. Barbaric acts of stoning, the death penalty and child executions are said to have been carried out under the guise of cultural essentialism. Such arguments are even used to facilitate the rule of undemocratic regimes where parliament is powerless, the rule of law non-existent and corruption rife. With globalisation, the visibility of human rights abuses has increased worldwide due to escalation in cross-border economic, social and cultural activity. It is therefore vital that each and every nation or state claiming to respect the rule of law and human rights acts immediately to combat the colossal problem of contemporary slavery. 

21 February 2014 / Ross Talbott / Lewis Power KC
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Coming to a courtrooom near you

Joyce Plotnikoff and Richard Woolfson explain the new ground rules for counsel and the recently launched advocacy toolkits designed to help.  

Counsel will need to “up their game” when dealing with vulnerability at court, thanks to recent guidance which requires greater fl exibility and advance planning. New Criminal Procedure Rule 3.8(4)(d) requires courts to take “every reasonable step” to facilitate the participation of witnesses and defendants. This includes ground rules hearings (GRHs), at which the judge, advocates – and intermediary, if any – discuss how a vulnerable person should be questioned, or how a vulnerable defendant can be enabled to participate effectively in the trial. Decision-making at the GRH is given a high profile in the Lord Chief Justice’s Criminal Practice Direction 3E and the Judicial College’s Equal Treatment Bench Book chapter 5, both issued this autumn. While GRHs have been obligatory in intermediary trials since Part F.1 Application for a Special Measures Direction was introduced in 2010, the new guidance emphasises that a GRH should be scheduled in any case involving a vulnerable witness or defendant,  whether or not an intermediary takes part in the trial. 

  

20 February 2014 / Joyce Plotnikoff / Richard Woolfson
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A Swansong of Guidance

In his final Court of Appeal judgment as Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge gave significant guidance to counsel on how to conduct a criminal trial. David Wurtzel explains  

At the very moment that the Operation Chalice trial was taking place in Stafford, over in Manchester another trial, equally worrying in terms of advocacy, was underway. R v Farooqi and others [2013] EWCA Crim 1649 concerned a trial of four men charged on a 10-count indictment alleging terrorism and soliciting to murder. 

  

10 February 2014 / David Wurtzel
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The Boy Who Cried Wolf

Just because a witness has lied once does not mean they will always be lying, argues Deborah Gould, who explains the new Guidelines issued after the collapse of the Stafford Case  

In May 2011 the trial of Operation Chalice began at Stafford Crown Court only to collapse 16 weeks later. The first of a string of similar multi-handed trials, the indictment charged counts of sexual abuse, traffi cking, “grooming” and prostitution of numerous teenage girls. 

10 February 2014 / Deborah Gould
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Choices and consequences

How does a drug addict who yearns to change their life around do so? HH Michael Baker QC explains one police force’s pioneering scheme.  

Drug addicts do not have an easy life. Class A drugs do not come cheap. Purloined property can only be fenced for a fraction of its value. Thousands of pounds worth of goods may have to be burgled or otherwise nefariously acquired each week in order to feed a Class A drug habit. And the addict is constantly looking over his shoulder, suspicious, insecure and afraid. Not surprisingly many addicts yearn for a quieter, easier and better life. In 2006 Hertfordshire Police pioneered an interviewing technique based on this desire for a changed way of life. By befriending suitable addicts and respecting their aspirations they persuaded them to admit to all their past offending in a series of drive-rounds and interviews. So effective was this that, by the time they got to court, they often had scores – sometimes several hundreds – of offences waiting to be taken into consideration. 

30 November 2013 / Michael Baker KC
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Amendment and limitation

Martin Canny explains recent case law on CPR 17.4(2) and the interaction with the Latent Damage Act 1986  

Building work on Mr Bala Perampalam Chandra’s ill-fated Manchester hotel development project commenced in October 2001, ran significantly over budget in 2002 and came to an abrupt halt in August 2003 when his company’s financiers called in their loans and appointed receivers. Thereafter, his situation worsened as he was fixed with a significant element of the cost overruns incurred after the original contractors were re-appointed to complete the project, in addition to the sums he had personally guaranteed. 

31 October 2013 / Martin Canny
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Redressing the democratic deficit

A Government consultation led to proposals to downgrade the status of Lewisham Hospital. The people of Lewisham took action and set up an Independent Panel of Inquiry. Michael Mansfield QC and Elizabeth Woodcraft explain the role that barristers played.  

In 1945 a remarkable vision was forged. People wanted a fresh start and a continued role in shaping their future. This deeply felt belief was in no way daunted by the paucity of resources nor the exhaustion of war. Intrinsic to this revitalised democracy was a foundation built on universal healthcare, education and access to legal welfare. 

31 October 2013 / Liz Woodcraft / Michael Mansfield KC
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Time for change and investment

The Chair of the Bar sets out how the new government can restore the justice system

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