Jobs & Education0 min ago
I sincerely hope
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Why not? The public seem to think that counsel have to think the same as thel lay client,or think he's innocent. It's that 'How can you defend a man you know is guilty?' question which barristers are asked , seemingly every time a layman finds out what they do for a living.In fact, counsel argue to the best of their ability, to win the case for whichever side their hired by. The result is all they're after; the job satisfaction is in getting it.
This one happens to be good on human rights law. Just the man for the job.
This one happens to be good on human rights law. Just the man for the job.
He didn't get the job after all:-
http:// www.dai lymail. ...at-B ritish- court.h tml
The guy who did isn't even a judge!!
http://
The guy who did isn't even a judge!!
Not even a judge? We don't have a system of career judges, unlike, say, France, where they start as very junior investigating magistrates and work their way up. All our judges have been counsel or solicitors. The old Judicial Committee of the House of Lords (now The Supreme Court) occasionally had a member who had previously been an academic, so, in itself,even that is not an objection.
Yes, the man who represented the hate preacher might have been just the man to get him ejected from the country!. 'Poacher turned gamekeeper' comes to mind. A lot of counsel both prosecute and defend ; the prosecuting only practice is a rarity. I've a feeling, though, that professional etiquette would stop him acting against his own, erstwhile, lay client in what is effectively the same cause!
Yes, the man who represented the hate preacher might have been just the man to get him ejected from the country!. 'Poacher turned gamekeeper' comes to mind. A lot of counsel both prosecute and defend ; the prosecuting only practice is a rarity. I've a feeling, though, that professional etiquette would stop him acting against his own, erstwhile, lay client in what is effectively the same cause!