Practical Advocacy in the Crown Court

Practical Advocacy in the Crown Court

Practical Advocacy in the Crown Court

Practical Advocacy in the Crown Court

eBook

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Overview

Practical Advocacy in the Crown Court follows the life of a case in the Crown Court chronologically, providing guidance and insights at each step. It guides the reader from first conference through legal arguments and witness handling to sentencing hearings, with references to procedure, codes of conduct, and key cases. With an emphasis on practical advice, each chapter follows a similar format incorporating dos and don'ts, mock situations, and sections on good practice.

Key topics covered include:
-Making and opposing bail applications
-Effective communication with lay clients
-Appeals against conviction and sentence in the Crown Court
-Evidential submissions
-Witness handling of complainants, vulnerable witnesses, police officers and experts
-Making effective jury speeches
-Sentencing, mitigation and advocacy in cases involving the Mental Health Act

This is the only specialist guide written for Crown Court advocates, by Crown Court advocates. It provides learned advice on common situations such as hearsay applications, hostile witnesses, making speeches or mitigating in cases where it may feel like there is little to say. It also provides insight on good communication with clients as well as court room advocacy, and dealing with lay clients, solicitors and police officers in conference. In addition, it covers written advocacy in detail, including persuasive skeleton arguments and using jury bundles effectively.

Depending on the experience of the reader, this book helps the:
-new advocate by giving them insight into situations that arise frequently, with a proper understanding of their role, as well as advice on how to adapt their style to the witness or the Judge
-progressing advocate to develop skills with advice garnered from counsel of many years' experience, such as sections dealing with witness handling and evidential submissions in more complex cases, including rape and serious sexual offences work, proceeds of crime applications, case conferences with the CPS and presenting documents to juries in larger cases
-experienced and busy advocate by looking at situations of greater complexity, such as the purpose of jury advocacy, and it will also act as a refresher for the more established advocate with writer's block in a tricky case

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526516336
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 10/03/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 200
File size: 427 KB

About the Author

Mary Cowe
Mary is a criminal barrister who appears in serious and complex cases. She does a mix of prosecution and defence work, exercising her forensic abilities and her advocacy skills in a variety of different types of case, including complex fraud matters and multi-handed drug conspiracies, as well as prosecuting and defending sexual offences. Her approach to any case is rooted in systematic and detailed preparation.

Susan Cavender
Susan specialises in a variety of areas of law that includes criminal, licensing, driving defence cases, regulatory/disciplinary and inquest hearings. She works primarily in crime covering a wide range of cases for both prosecution and defence. Noted for her clarity and good communications skills, Susan has writing experience having contributed to a Jordans text on Licensing.
Mary Cowe is a criminal barrister. She is a fraud specialist and has been commended for her ability to explain complex matters with lucidity to juries. She also regularly appears in cases involving psychiatric evidence and has written a dissertation about mental health and crime as part of a criminology MPhil. She is an advocacy trainer and a pupil supervisor.
Susan Cavender specialises in a variety of areas of law that includes criminal, licensing, driving defence cases, regulatory/disciplinary and inquest hearings. She works primarily in crime covering a wide range of cases for both prosecution and defence. Noted for her clarity and good communications skills, Susan has writing experience having contributed to a Jordans text on the Licensing Act 2004.

Table of Contents

Part I Starting out
Chapter 1 Survival guide
Chapter 2 What is advocacy ?
Part II Bail
Chapter 3 Bail hearings
Chapter 4 Bench warrants and custody time limit applications
Part III Clients
Chapter 5 Talking to clients
Chapter 6 The adversarial system
Part IV Evidential submissions
Chapter 7 Judicial advocacy v jury advocacy
Chapter 8 Bad character
Chapter 9 Hearsay
Chapter 10 Excluding evidence
Chapter 11 Insufficiency of evidence
Chapter 12 The Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999, ss 41–43
Part V The Trial: Witnesses
Chapter 13 Witnesses
Chapter 14 Complainants
Chapter 15 Child and vulnerable witnesses
Chapter 16 Dealing with police witnesses
Chapter 17 Expert witnesses
Chapter 18 Defendants and defence witnesses
Part VI The Trial: Written advocacy
Chapter 19 Jury bundles as a way to persuade
Chapter 20 The successful skeleton argument
Part VII The Trial: Speeches
Chapter 21 Speeches
Chapter 22 Hard things to say
Part VIII Sentencing
Chapter 23 Opening for sentence
Chapter 24 Effective mitigation
Chapter 25 Hospital orders
Chapter 26 Ancillary orders
Chapter 27 Confiscation under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002
Part IX Appeals
Chapter 28 Appeal against conviction and sentence
Part X Final word
Chapter 29 The Good Advocate
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