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The Genocide Trial of Rios Montt

Illari Aragón Noriega and Daniel Carey on the trial’s significance and the challenges faced by those seeking justice in Guatemala.  

The trial and conviction of Efrain Rios Montt, ex de facto  president of Guatemala, is unprecedented. Never before has a former head of state been tried and convicted for genocide in a domestic court. On 10 May 2013, he was found guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity and sentenced to 80 years in prison. 

19 February 2014 / Illari Aragon Noriega / Daniel Carey
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Judging images

The 2005 and 2013 legal reporting reforms have given rise to initiatives and new images which feed into a new Arts and Humanities Research Council funded project: Judging Images: the making, management and consumption of judicial images. Leslie J Moran reflects upon this project and on Isobel Williams’s work.  

Isobel Williams is not so much a courtroom artist, commissioned to produce court pictures for an image hungry media, but an artist interpreting her courtroom  experiences in words and pictures. Her licence to draw in the Supreme Court is indicative of a new relationship between courts and visual media. 

  

18 February 2014 / Leslie J Moran / Leslie J Moran
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Picture-blogging in the Supreme Court

Blogging artist Isobel Williams on her work in the highest court in the land.  

Since July 2012 I have been an occasional blogger-with-a-difference in the Supreme Court, with the court’s permission. The difference is that I illustrate my blog with drawings which I do on the spot; I rarely embellish them afterwards. 

17 February 2014 / Isobel Williams
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Maura McGowan QC

Job title 

Silk, 2 Bedford Row 

2 Bedford Row is one of the country’s leading criminal and regulatory sets specialising in high profile fraud and murder cases, health and safety and professional disciplinary proceedings. 

17 February 2014 / Maura McGowan KC
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Secret E–Diary – February 2014

A strike or not a strike? That is the question.  

Everybody has returned from the seasonal festivities absent the traditional good cheer. The clerks have “accidentally” discovered a working party report from a sub-committee chaired by one or other of the brothers Twist – a committee that I have to confess I had no idea I had appointed and probably never did – that has recommended our staff take the same pay cut proposed for us by a Ministry of Justice that increasingly looks better equipped to be engaged in the used-car trade. 

  

17 February 2014
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Westminster Watch – January 2014

Toby Craig reflects on the life of Nelson Mandela and his contribution to the political landscape.  

In a pithy sentence, Barack Obama masterfully captured the essence of Nelson Mandela’s influence on global politics. The ability of political leaders in a few short words to capture a mood, to shape and influence thoughts and to change the destiny of nations sometimes seems a lost and forgotten art. In a year that saw the celebration of the 50th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech and the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the assassination of one of the greatest orators of the twentieth century, John F Kennedy, it ended up being a year which will be rightly remembered for the death of another great leader of our times who understood better than most the enormous power of language. 

10 February 2014
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Playing with a Straight Bat

David Wurtzel talks to Nicholas Lavender QC, incoming Chairman of the Bar, about his new role and his plans for his year in office.  

When I asked the 2014 Chairman of the Bar Council, Nicholas Lavender QC, why he wanted to be Chairman, he said, “For me, it was the culmination of a career involved in Bar politics.” He has combined this career with a busy practice in commercial work in which he specialises in actions for and against banks in negligent advice cases. As a former Chairman of the Professional Practice Committee, there can be few who better understand the ethical issues which face the profession. Noting that he is a member of the Yorkshire County Cricket Club and of the MCC, it would be fair to say that both literally and metaphorically, he plays with a straight bat. 

10 February 2014 / David Wurtzel
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A First Joint Meeting

David Nolan SC and Mark Mulholland QC report for Counsel on the First Joint Meeting of the General Council of the Bar of Ireland & the Bar Council of Northern Ireland  

"May I add to my farewell my hope and prayer that the Bar of Ireland whatever may befall, hitherto united as one body, inspired with fraternal loyalty to their fellows will continue to transmit their fine traditions, and that Bar and Bench together will never fail to preserve and uphold the lofty standard of their predecessors, so honoured by us all for learning, independence and courage.” (Bencher’s Minute Book 1917 – 1928 p 135. 13 April 1921). 

10 February 2014 / David Nolan SC
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Small But Mighty

From the beginning of January 2014 barristers will take control of their own Continuing Professional Development. Oliver Hanmer explains the new system and examines the effect of this small but important change on the working lives of barristers.  

A seemingly small but strikingly significant change to barristers’ working lives happened this month. Amid the flurry of activity that the New Year brings, barristers will be forgiven for failing to notice a real break with an annual tradition. This year, for the first time, no-one will have received the regulator’s reminder for barristers to complete and return their Continuing Professional Development cards. And that is because, this year, the Bar Standards Board (BSB) is not requiring barristers to send them in for inspection. 

  

10 February 2014
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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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