logo
Tributes to ‘legendary' defence barrister Courtenay Griffiths KC

Tributes to ‘legendary' defence barrister Courtenay Griffiths KC

ITV News4 days ago

The British legal world has paid tribute to 'legendary' defence barrister Courtenay Griffiths KC, who has died at the age of 69.
Jamaica-born Dr Griffiths was among the first black lawyers to be awarded the then-Queen's Counsel status and rose to become a most prominent and formidable force at the criminal bar.
He defended in many high-profile criminal trials after he was called to the bar in July 1980 and awarded silk in 1998.
Notable cases included the Pc Keith Blakelock murder trial, the Brighton bombing and the Damilola Taylor murder trial.
In 2007 he represented former Liberia president Charles Taylor in his war crimes trial in The Hague and also sat as a part-time judge.
Barrister Laurie-Anne Power KC, of 25 Bedford Row, said: 'He was the single most influential figure in my legal career.
'He epitomised brilliance, intellect and fearlessness in equal measure.
'He considered it his duty to open doors and provide opportunities to those who might not otherwise have them.
'He was unapologetic about changing the landscape of the bar.
'As an advocate, there was simply no-one better.
'He commanded the attention of anyone and everyone in the courtroom.
'He had it all in abundance.
'But behind the advocate was a gentle, kind, and selfless man who loved the law.'
Ms Power said she first met Dr Griffiths at a law fair in 1998 and he immediately asked her if she was Jamaican after sharing stories of their mutual love for the island.
She added: 'He was my only mentor, in the true sense of the word.
'He hounded me into applying for silk and did not stop until I got it.
'He was a friend first and made me believe that I could achieve anything within the profession.'
ITV News senior correspondent Ronke Phillips said: 'To watch Courtenay Griffiths in action at the Old Bailey was compelling.
'He was a skilled advocate. Sharp, clever and when needed, witty.
'Like all great barristers, he treated the courtroom as though he was the leading man in his own drama.
'His exchanges were often devastating for witnesses, but those of us on the press benches were delighted.
'He never failed to deliver the quotes we needed for our copy.
'Courtenay was charm itself. Serious about his work but never too serious to be friendly and always with a twinkle in his eye. RIP'
Writing on X, Jacqueline McKenzie, solicitor and partner at law firm Leigh Day, said: 'Through his practice at Garden Court and 25 Bedford Row Chambers, he acted in major criminal and human rights cases, in the UK and overseas, and left an indelible mark of greatness on our profession, and on the world.'
Barrister Amina Graham, from 2 Hare Court Chambers, wrote on LinkedIn: 'He demonstrated the importance of representation for me in my pursuit of a career at the Bar.
'I worked with him during my time at the Special Court for Sierra Leona where he represented Charles Taylor … a formidable advocate and an inspiration to so many.'
Dr Griffiths was a multi-award-winning barrister who spent the majority of his career between Garden Court Chambers and 25 Bedford Row.
In 2020, Dr Griffiths was handed an outstanding achievement award at the Legal 500 Awards and was given a lifetime achievement award at the UK Diversity Legal Awards in 2018.
He was awarded an honorary doctorate from Leeds Metropolitan University in 2005.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RAF drone wiped out an IS jihadi on a motorbike after tracking him through Syria
RAF drone wiped out an IS jihadi on a motorbike after tracking him through Syria

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

RAF drone wiped out an IS jihadi on a motorbike after tracking him through Syria

The unmanned aircraft began tailing the motorcycle-riding fighter in Sarmada, near the border with Turkey DRONE STRIKE RAF drone wiped out an IS jihadi on a motorbike after tracking him through Syria Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AN RAF drone wiped out an IS jihadi on a motorbike after tracking him through Syria, The Sun on Sunday can reveal. The Islamist terrorist was taken out by a Hellfire missile fired from the £24million Reaper drone. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 3 Tyrant Bashar Al-Assad fled to Moscow after rebel forces swept to power in Syria Credit: Alamy The unmanned aircraft began tailing the motorcycle-riding fighter in Sarmada, near the border with Turkey, after intelligence identified him as a 'known member' of IS. The Ministry of Defence told The Sun on Sunday in a statement: 'The Reaper's crew carefully tracked the terrorist on his motorcycle. "Having checked that there were no signs of civilians nearby who might be placed at risk, [they] conducted a successful engagement, striking the motorcycle and eliminating the terrorist.' Sources added the remotely-operated drone's crew were 'extremely careful' to wait for a 'gap' during the trailing of the terrorist. The took him out when no other traffic or pedestrians were within a clear radius of him. It is understood they had been monitoring him for 'some time' before firing the Hellfire missile at him. The June 10 strike was the second RAF drone hit on an IS member in Syria this year. In February — three months after tyrant Bashar Al-Assad fled to Moscow and rebel forces swept to power — another British drone pilot killed a member of the death cult in Aleppo. The UK has been fighting IS, also called Daesh, since 2014. The operation, codenamed Shader, saw the RAF conducting air strikes against the terror group in Iraq and later Syria. I fought ISIS in Syria & I know bloodthirsty thugs are plotting comeback after fall of Assad - Europe must be ready, says Brit fighter It has become one of the RAF's biggest operations in the last 25 years, with British pilots flying more than 10,000 sorties and striking more than 1,400 targets. UK jets have carried out a fifth of all air strikes by coalition forces, equivalent to the contribution by US pilots. Last year, former Defence Secretary Ben Wallace revealed that an IS terrorist had to be taken out by an RAF drone — because human rights laws prevented the SAS from seizing him. The Islamist, who was making biological weapons, was among several killed after snatch operations were ruled out. He was eliminated in a Hellfire missile blitz in 2022. Mr Wallace said lawyers told him the European Convention on Human Rights made it illegal to hand over any suspects to Syria due to the risk of torture. But they could also not be taken to Britain because there was no extradition treaty with the Assad regime.

Brit dad unable to speak after holiday hotspot 'assault' and bleed on brain
Brit dad unable to speak after holiday hotspot 'assault' and bleed on brain

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Brit dad unable to speak after holiday hotspot 'assault' and bleed on brain

Speaking for Ashton Jones' family, Angela Roden Shepherd said the dad is slowly regaining his ability to speak at a hospital in Bangkok, but added he isn't yet coherent A Brit dad has been left hooked up to a machine and fighting for his life after he was allegedly beaten "half to death" with a brain bleed. Ashton Jones, 29, had part of his skull removed in emergency surgery following an alleged assault during a holiday with friends in Thailand that left him unable to talk nearly a month later. The dad, from Cwmbran, Wales, had flown out to Bangkok with his group on May 30, but disappeared during a night out in the early hours of June 3. His shocked pals had no idea what had happened until he turned up at Chonburi Hospital, where doctors had placed him on life support. ‌ ‌ Ashton's friends say he had made a "miraculous recovery" as he remains in hospital care after the incident, but while he is now talking, he is not completely coherent. Speaking to WalesOnline on behalf of Ashton's family, Angela Roden Shepherd said he is "making very steady progress" with the family set to move him to rehabilitation following his "miraculous improvement" after his dad, Darren, refused a "do not resuscitate" order. She said: 'He's making very steady progress. "The next move is to get him back into the rehabilitation place he originally was in before he got a lung infection. To put into context just how miraculous a recovery Ashton has made so far, Darren was actually asked if he wanted to put a do not resuscitate order on Ashton just a week ago. "Darren said 'absolutely not' and in a few days Ashton had made a miraculous improvement. I spoke to Ashton a couple of days ago. He's talking. He's not coherent but he's able to communicate. He's off the ventilator. "He still has to be tube fed and he still has oxygen fed to him, and he still has to be restrained because he's in a lot of pain." Ashton's family aim to return the dad to Wales in a few weeks, where he will receive further treatment at the Royal Gwent Hospital in Newport, including an operation to replace a lost part of his skull with the titanium plate. Angela added that the family, with the help of a British man and Thai woman who are putting up Ashton's father, has also spoken with police in Thailand, who they claim believe Ashton was assaulted. She said he was "beaten half to death", but added that the family has refrained from speculation as the circumstances surrounding the alleged attack remain unconfirmed. She said: "We don't know the circumstances around how and why, so we're not going to speculate. 'Ashton is starting to mumble things but it's too incoherent. The chances of catching them are virtually zero and the chances of getting money back to get Ashton home are virtually zero too.' Ashton travelled to Thailand without medical insurance, and his family is attempting to pay for the costs with a GoFundMe fundraiser, which has so far raised more than £22,000. Angela said: "We really need all the help we can get. We're still short of the funds we need to get Ashton back. Any help at all is greatly appreciated."

Ice arrests of US military veterans and their relatives are on the rise: ‘a country that I fought for'
Ice arrests of US military veterans and their relatives are on the rise: ‘a country that I fought for'

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Ice arrests of US military veterans and their relatives are on the rise: ‘a country that I fought for'

The son of an American citizen and military veteran – but who has no citizenship to any country – was deported from the US to Jamaica in late May. Jermaine Thomas's deportation, recently reported on by the Austin Chronicle, is one of a growing number of immigration cases involving military service members' relatives or even veterans themselves who have been ensnared in the Trump administration's mass deportation program. As the Chronicle reported, Thomas was born on a US army base in Germany to an American citizen father, who was originally born in Jamaica and is now dead. Thomas does not have US, German or Jamaican citizenship – but Trump's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (Ice) agency deported him anyway to Jamaica, a country in which he had never stepped foot. Thomas had spent two-and-a-half months incarcerated while waiting for an update on his case. He was previously at the center of a case brought before the US supreme court regarding his unique legal status. The federal government argued that Thomas – who had previously received a deportation order – was not a citizen simply because he was born on a US army base, and it used prior criminal convictions to buttress the case against him. He petitioned for a review of the order, but the supreme court denied him, finding his father 'did not meet the physical presence requirement of the [law] in force at the time of Thomas's birth'. From Jamaica, Thomas told the Chronicle: 'If you're in the US army, and the army deploys you somewhere, and you've gotta have your child over there – and your child makes a mistake after you pass away – and you put your life on the line for this country, are you going to be OK with them just kicking your child out of the country?' He added, in reference to his father: 'It was just Memorial Day [in late May]. Y'all are disrespecting his service and his legacy.' In recent months, US military veterans' family members have been increasingly detained by immigration officials, as the administration continues pressing for mass deportations. A US marine veteran, during an interview on CNN, said he felt 'betrayed' after immigration officials beat and arrested his father at a landscaping job. The arrested man had moved to the US from Mexico in the 1990s without documentation but was detained by Ice agents this month while doing landscaping work at a restaurant in Santa Ana, California. In another recent case, the wife of another Marine Corps veteran was detained by Ice despite still breastfeeding her three-month-old daughter. According to the Associated Press, the veteran's wife had been going through a process to obtain legal residency. The Trump administration has ramped up efforts to detain and deport people nationwide. During a May meeting, White House officials pressed Ice to increase its daily arrests to at least 3,000 people daily. That would result in 1 million people being arrested annually by Ice. Following the tense meeting, Ice officials have increased their enforcement operations, including by detaining an increasing number of people with no criminal record. Being undocumented is a civil infraction – not a crime. According to a recent Guardian analysis, as of mid-June, Ice data shows there were more than 11,700 people in immigration detention arrested by the agency despite no record of them being charged with or convicted of a crime. That represents a staggering 1,271% increase from data released on those in Ice detention immediately preceding the start of Trump's second term. In March, Ice officials arrested the daughter of a US veteran who had been fighting a legal battle regarding her status. Alma Bowman, 58, was taken into custody by Ice during a check-in at the Atlanta field office, despite her having lived in the US since she was 10 years old. Bowman was born in the Philippines during the Vietnam war, to a US navy service member from Illinois stationed there. She had lived in Georgia for almost 50 years. Her permanent residency was revoked following a minor criminal conviction from 20 years ago, leading her to continue a legal battle to obtain citizenship in the US. Previously, Bowman was detained by Ice at a troubled facility in Georgia, where non-consensual gynecological procedures were allegedly performed on detained women. In 2020, she had been a key witness for attorneys and journalists regarding the controversy. According to an interview with The Intercept from that year, Bowman said she had always thought she was a US citizen. In another recent case, a US army veteran and green-card holder left on his own to South Korea. His deportation order was due to charges related to drug possession and an issue with drug addiction after being wounded in combat in the 1980s, for which he earned the prestigious Purple Heart citation. 'I can't believe this is happening in America,' Sae Joon Park, who had held legal permanent residency, told National Public Radio. 'That blows me away – like, [it is] a country that I fought for.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store