He happened to be a barrister with considerable and very relevant professional experience and skills. |
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There were those controlled by instructions, for example, the briefless barrister recruited for the work. |
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One briefless barrister who had been watching the trial, came out with a novel. |
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Councillors even want to bung a barrister a few grand to state their case at the public inquiry. |
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The doctor is then accredited with the General Medical Council, much as the pupil barrister is with the Bar Council. |
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The barrister acting for the community council is now objecting to the inspector's decision. |
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He was sentenced for breaching his order and inflicting actual bodily harm on his barrister. |
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His father was an Oxford man who was called to the bar, but instead of becoming a barrister went into business. |
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The photo had been altered so that between the doctors peering down at the operation is a wigged and gowned barrister. |
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Her barrister was specifically allowed to prompt the witness in reexamination. |
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The barrister handed in references from Holland's employers, mother and a family friend. |
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Defence barrister David Taylor said he did it because he had drunk ten to 12 pints, and several alcopops with vodka. |
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If you grant me this appeal, then my friend from overseas is going to remit me some money and then I will be able to engage a barrister. |
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His barrister said he had resigned from the school where he was teaching and was now hoping to retrain as a florist. |
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Five years later, at the age of forty-four, he retrained as a barrister and, from 1917, practised at the parliamentary bar. |
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The barrister also says that his actions could amount to conspiracy to commit criminal damage. |
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He built up a career as a planning barrister and maintained an active interest in the political scene. |
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Juries are human, and can be easily swayed by the emotions of the case, and the clever manipulation of a strong barrister. |
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The young barrister, only at the bar nine months, then attempted to cross-examine this key prosecution witness. |
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If there is anybody who knows an honest barrister or solicitor that can help me with my defence and so, please let me know. |
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This is not dissimilar to charges of professional misconduct as a barrister or solicitor. |
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You are the first barrister without a solicitor that has ever appeared in front of me. |
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Or that one needs to pay a solicitor as well as a barrister to go through a simple trial? |
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Our barrister complimented all my family for the dignity they showed throughout the trial. |
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The eldest son of a Dublin barrister who moved to London in 1867, Northcliffe was largely self-educated. |
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Cornell, a lean, beaky charmer of a boss, would have made an amiable barrister. |
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A barrister launched a blistering attack on an anti-social behaviour order imposed by magistrates on Thursday. |
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Helen McCrory, plays his partner Rose Fitzgerald, a bolshy barrister who begins the series heavily pregnant with Guthrie's child. |
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Indeed, Mr Ross, now in his seventies, is still at his desk, working as a barrister taking briefs. |
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When I was a very young barrister, I had a brief to defend a man who was charged with assaulting the police. |
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The exercise of sound judgment in briefing a barrister is one of the professional services a solicitor offers a client. |
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A very experienced barrister had been briefed, but the Kellys couldn't find the money for his fees. |
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As the first barrister briefed in that seminal case, it behoves me to respond to this ignorant calumny. |
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Coun Williams employed a legal team and has now received a written opinion from his barrister stating Doncaster Council must act. |
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How does that fit in with the liability of, say, a solicitor for giving advice, or a barrister for giving chambers opinions? |
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A barrister tells a cautionary tale from Australia, on the dangers of creating a crime of incitement to religious hatred. |
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He was described in court by his own barrister as a social misfit, inept in the company of adults. |
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While under the master's guidance, which is generally for a year, the newly qualified barrister is known as a devil. |
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As I'd never supped with the devil, I was thrilled to find myself in the company of a junior barrister who's devilling at the moment. |
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There was Kyle Leyden, a young barrister about to embark on the two-year apprenticeship known as devilling. |
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By then, he'd become a barrister, then a senior lecturer in criminology at Melbourne University, and then moved into private consulting. |
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My mother particularly thought I'd make a very good barrister, and you know, do I think I could plead a case in court? |
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She had heard the entire prosecution case and her barrister had cross-examined all the witnesses produced on behalf of the Crown. |
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The Conservative leader is formidable, a successful barrister with a good grasp of detail, albeit with a well-documented short fuse. |
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The barrister daughter of a leading Bradford judge has died after a long battle with cystic fibrosis. |
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A trained barrister, he made sure that laws were passed to prevent the misuse of mineral resources for private gain. |
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He is a barrister and solicitor of this court, and he carries on the practice of his profession at the City of London. |
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The barrister is obliged to produce the records for inspection to an authorised revenue official at the barrister's place of work. |
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By profession he is a barrister but he skilfully juggles so many other careers he ought to be in a circus. |
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He is married to Marjorie, a barrister and former consultant dermatologist. |
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If a person is a pupil working for a barrister, he or she is a danger to shipping. |
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In 1876 he became a barrister when he was called to the Bar by the Inner Temple. |
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Three decades later and Constance, by now a barrister, repaid the favour by successfully acting for the school when it mutated into a hotel and sought a liquor licence. |
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Aidan Quinn has been imported to take the role of the good barrister and Nurse Hathaway from ER is the barmaid who has a sweet spot for the eejit Doyle. |
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The barrister heard stumbling footsteps coming up the stairs. |
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A family law barrister close to the Crikey crew advises that many men attempt to talk down their earning capacity when they are negotiating settlements with former wives. |
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Perhaps what would be worse than a barrister liking his or her client would be disliking the client, especially when the accused is charged with morally repugnant crimes. |
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In the bar you might find yourself standing next to a TV personality, a Bristol barrister, an Italian actress or land-owning couple from the shires. |
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We say that the solicitor was engaged and then briefed a barrister. |
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I think another time I will send a barrister who's a good cross-examiner because what was needed here was a good cross-examination of their witnesses. |
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After preparing for the Bar at Lincoln's Inn, he practiced as a barrister, being ultimately named Queen's Counsel, and later accepting appointment to the Bench. |
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It tells the story a British barrister, a criminal lawyer, in mid-life crisis. |
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The dean told him face to face that Africans lacked the innate skills necessary to become a barrister. |
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Responding to criticism about the treatment of the deportees, the barrister for the State said that an interpreter and doctor had been on board the aircraft. |
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The founder, Motilal Nehru, an Anglophile barrister, was a liberal member of the Indian nationalist movement. |
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Fair Defence barrister Martin Steen said if probation officers are allowed to use polygraphs they should also be admissible evidence. |
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Defending barrister John Philpotts said that Dunbar accepted that he fantasised about young girls. |
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Kenneth Mure QC, a Scot who works as a barrister in England, chaired the trio's meetings, which dragged on for 25 months. |
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Members of the press may sit in the press bench, which is usually positioned alongside the prosecuting barrister. |
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He had just finished a university degree and was moving to London for training as a barrister. |
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Carson, a leading barrister, diverged from the normal practice of asking closed questions. |
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Defendants may hire a solicitor or barrister to represent them, often paid for by legal aid. |
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Private prosecutors can either represent themselves, or they may instruct a solicitor or barrister to represent them. |
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However, defendants may be represented by a solicitor or, less commonly, a barrister. |
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Davies was a barrister and a keen book collector who acquired the manuscripts gradually from a number of sources. |
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An English lawyer, whether barrister or solicitor, never has an office, but always chambers. |
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A barrister would then be hired by the solicitor to speak for his client in court. |
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After being called to the Bar on 20 April 1578 Coke immediately began practising as a barrister. |
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He trained as a barrister and after a slow start to his career achieved great success. |
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While still at Oxford Asquith had already entered Lincoln's Inn to train as a barrister, and in 1875 he served a pupillage under Charles Bowen. |
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Blair then became a member of Lincoln's Inn and enrolled as a pupil barrister. |
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It was noticeable that Mr Murdoch, happy to toy with the barrister like a cat with a baby mouse, kept sir-ring the judge Uriah Heepishly. |
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The film star, 53, is due to marry British barrister Amal Alamuddin in September and flew her mum Baria over to Lake Como at the weekend. |
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One of the defendants was cross-examined by prosecution barrister Clare Wilks at Cardiff Crown Court yesterday. |
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The barrister claimed the couple's behaviour culminated in them forcing their way into the offices of Zig Zag Productions and frightening staff. |
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The top barrister helped free Gerry Conlon and three others after one of the worst miscarriages of justice in British history. |
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The first trial resulted in a hung jury while the re-trial was halted when a senior barrister fell ill. |
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Khalid admitted shouting the remark more than once when questioned by his defence barrister. |
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The barrister said the drug is known to cause obsessive compulsive behaviour and hypersexuality. |
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Prosecuting barrister Claire Jones said 87,232 images were found, and a further 445,000 remained uncategorised. |
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For an unbelieving face, whether the dull dining countenance of a mayor, or the keen searching countenance of a barrister, is a sad bone in the throat of utterance. |
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Coke's style and attitude as a barrister are well documented. |
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Coke's father, Robert Coke, was a barrister and Bencher of Lincoln's Inn who built up a strong practice representing clients from his home area of Norfolk. |
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Defending barrister Peter Rouche QC said Owen was deeply ashamed. |
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Scots barrister Kenneth Mure QC is chairing the three-person tribunal on the pounds 50million offshore tax avoidance schemes which helped drag Rangers into financial disaster. |
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Amanda studied law at Reading University, aiming to be a barrister specialising in tax matters, and went to Bar School before completing her pupillage. |
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Historical practice, which may still apply where no other report is available, permitted parties to rely on any report 'with the name of a barrister annexed to it. |
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There are currently three law schools offering the Postgraduate Certificate in Laws, required for starting work as a trainee solicitor or pupil barrister. |
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Regional outfit Browne Jacobson is to offer full barrister pupillages for the first time in response to what it said was growing demand for its in-house advocacy services. |
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Judges in the County Court are either former barristers or former solicitors, whereas in the High Court they are more likely to have formerly been a barrister. |
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Defence barrister Jon Charles Rees QC pointed out that Dr Joseph regularly appeared for the Crown Prosecution Service fighting diminished responsibility. |
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He again applied for a judicial post in December 1762, after an opening in the Exchequer of Pleas came up, but lost to George Perrott, a leading Exchequer barrister. |
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Prosecuting barrister Claire Jones said 87,232 images were found, of which 478 movie images were at the worst category A, and a further 445,000 remained uncategorised. |
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When Carlile stood down it ended the direct link with the professional Liberal barrister MPs that had been existent in the Welsh Liberal party for its whole history. |
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Although not considered a great barrister of the period, he maintained a steady flow of cases, primarily in the King's Bench and Exchequer of Pleas. |
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With sponsorship from the Prince of Wales and his success with the Analysis, Blackstone began work as a barrister, although he kept up his lecture series at Oxford. |
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On 3 July 1753 he formally gave up his practice as a barrister and instead embarked on a series of lectures on English law, the first of their kind. |
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Sharpe's barrister Ruth Cranage urged Judge Benson to suspend any prison sentence so that Sharpe could undertake treatment provided by the Probation Service. |
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