Timothy Holroyde
Lord Justice Holroyde (Judge) | ||||||||||
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Born | Timothy Victor Holroyde 18 August 1955 | |||||||||
Alma mater | Wadham College (Oxford) | |||||||||
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Sir Timothy Holroyde, styled Lord Justice Holroyde, is an English Court of Appeal judge, formerly a judge of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales, Queen's Bench Division. He was appointed to the Court of Appeal in October 2017 and was sworn of the Privy Council.
In August 2018 Lord Justice Holroyde was appointed Chairman of the Sentencing Council.[1]
Barrister
Timothy Holroyde was educated at Bristol Grammar School and Wadham College, Oxford, and was called to the bar in 1977. As a barrister, he practised from Exchange Chambers, Liverpool. He was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1996, and was appointed to the High Court in January 2009. From 2012 he was a Presiding Judge of the Northern Circuit.
As a barrister, he appeared as counsel for the prosecution in the trial that followed the 2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster.
Judge
In 2012 Lord Justice Holroyde presided over the seven-month trial of Asil Nadir on fraud charges. Other cases presided over by him included the trial of Anjem Choudary in 2016 for terrorist-related offences, and the trial of Dale Cregan in 2013 for crimes including the murder of PC Fiona Bone and PC Nicola Hughes.[2]
Lord Justice of Appeal
On 11 August 2021, Lord Justice Holroyde overturned District Judge Vanessa Baraitser's decision, taken on health grounds, not to extradite Julian Assange when he ruled that the US government was able to appeal that decision.[3]
After a two-day hearing of the Julian Assange extradition case in October 2021, the Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett and Lord Justice Holroyde sided with the US on 10 December 2021, when the Court of Appeal reversed Vanessa Baraitser's decision not to extradite the WikiLeaks founder.[4]
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
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Document:Assange ruling a dangerous precedent for journalists and British justice | Article | 10 December 2021 | Jonathan Cook | And yet despite all this, the English High Court ruled on 10 December 2021 that it was satisfied with “assurances” that Assange’s wellbeing would be protected were he extradited to the United States. British judges may be persuaded by those assurances. Many others, including Assange, will not be. |
References
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