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Edmund Lawson

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Edmund James Lawson, QC (April 17, 1948 – March 26, 2009) was a prominent English barrister who worked on high profile cases.

Personal life

The only son of Donald and Veronica Lawson, he was born and grew up in Norwich, but also spent several years of his childhood in Ireland. He attended City of Norwich School and, although he excelled in Latin, decided to read law at University (for want, in his words, of a "better option"). He studied at Trinity Hall, Cambridge[1], where he was an active and keen participant in rugby union and punting; he graduated in 1970.

While at Cambridge, he met his first wife Jennifer Cleary, with whom he had three sons. They were divorced in 2002, and in 2003 Lawson married Christina Russell, with whom he already had two children and a stepson, and this marriage produced a further two children.

He was a keen musician, playing violin and viola, and with a penchant for the music of Bach and Mozart (as well as the earlier works of the Rolling Stones), and latterly was an active supporter and sponsor of the Nash Ensemble, the acclaimed chamber music ensemble. He was also an avid fan of rugby union, regularly attending (with friends or family) England internationals either at Twickenham or abroad, and was also a supporter of Harlequins RFC.

In January 2009, Lawson suffered the first of a series of strokes which left him severely incapacitated, and on 26 March he died peacefully of pneumonia. He was 60.

Career

Having been called to the Bar by Gray's Inn in 1971, he spent five years with a small civil set in Kings Bench Walk, before joining the (then) Chambers of Sir Arthur Irving, QC (the former Solicitor-General), at 4 Paper Buildings. He developed a sterling reputation as a criminal barrister, with particular expertise in financial crime and fraud, and took Silk in 1988. He was appointed Head of Chambers in 1990, a position he held for 11 years, during which time the set moved to 9-12 Bell Yard and firmly entrenched its reputation as one of the leading criminal sets in the country.

In 1998, he was appointed a Bencher of Gray's Inn. He sat for many years as Chairman of the Inn's Continuing Education Committee, and was actively involved in the provision of advocacy and ethics training to junior barristers and pupils.

In 2006, he was one of six high-profile QCs who moved to form a new "super set", Cloth Fair Chambers (named after the historic London street in which it was located). At the time, the concept of a "Silks only" set (i.e. one with no junior barristers or pupils) was seen as a controversial move, though Cloth Fair quickly confounded its critics by gaining recognition as the leading criminal chambers in London.

Notable trials

Lawson's criminal law practice saw him involved in a number of very high profile and often complex trials, including:

  • defending UBS Phillips & Drew in the 'Blue Arrow' securities Fraud
  • defending Ian Maxwell in the fraud trial arising from the Mirror Group Newspapers pension fund scandal
  • defending police officers against charges of corruption and of perverting the course of justice during the investigations into the 'Guildford Four' and 'Birmingham Six' bombings
  • defending hacker Gary McKinnon against extradition to the US to face charges of hacking into US Department of Defence systems
  • defending Railtrack in the corporate manslaughter trial following the Hatfield rail crash
  • prosecuting al-Qaeda terrorist Dhiren Barot on charges of conspiring to commit mass murder
  • defending Henry Sweetbaum, former Chairman and Chief Executive of Wickes plc, on charges of accounting fraud
  • acting for the Metropolitan Police in securing the reversal of an unlawful killing verdict in the shooting of Harry Stanley

Inquiries

In addition to his trial work, Lawson was involved in a number of highly sensitive inquiries, including:

  • Obituary in The Times [1]
  • Profile on the Cloth Fair Chambers website [2]
  • Profile on Chambers and Partners Guide to the UK Legal Profession[3]
  • Obituary in The Daily Telegraph [4]

References

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/comment/obituaries/article6093629.ece

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/law-obituaries/5309767/Edmund-Lawson-QC.html

http://www.clothfairchambers.com/members_profiles/edmund_lawson_qc.html

http://www.chambersandpartners.com/PersonProfile.aspx?CPK=235179&ssid=29106

Notes