- James Chadwin
James Armstrong Chadwin QC (
7 June 1930 –16 January 2006 ) was a prominent Britishbarrister , whose cases included defendingPeter Sutcliffe , the "Yorkshire Ripper".Chadwin was born in
Glasgow and educated at Glasgow Grammar School,Glasgow University (where he read modern languages and met the woman he was to marry) andJesus College, Oxford . Whilst at Oxford, he was active as an actor and director in university theatre and also joined the Oxford University Air Squadron. He then spent six years in theRoyal Air Force as an education officer atRAF Sandwich , his eyesight not being good enough to enable him to be a pilot.cite web|url=http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2006326,00.html| title= Obituaries: James Chadwin| date=24 January 2006 |publisher=The Times |accessdate=2008-02-04]He was then
called to the bar byGray's Inn in 1958 and joined chambers inNewcastle upon Tyne where his contemporaries included Peter Taylor, laterLord Chief Justice of England and Wales . Chadwin practised mainly in the field ofcriminal law and became aQueen's Counsel in 1976. He also became a Recorder in the same year, presiding over some trials at theOld Bailey . He was later appointed aBencher of Gray's Inn and, in 1988, Leader of theNorthern Circuit .Chadwin represented Peter Sutcliffe in 1981. Sutcliffe had admitted killing 13 women and attempting to kill seven others. Four psychiatrists reported on Sutcliffe and diagnosed
paranoid schizophrenia , and Sir Michael Havers QC, the Attorney-General, was prepared to accept a plea of guilty tomanslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility. However, the trial judge, Mr Justice Boreham, refused to accept this plea and so Sutcliffe was tried for murder. Chadwin's attempts to secure a manslaughter verdict failed, although the jury returned a majority verdict of 10:2 reflecting doubts that two jurors had.Apart from Sutcliffe, his clients included
Anthony Arkwright , who committed four murders in an apparent attempt to emulate Sutcliffe. He also representedDonna Anthony , who was convicted of killing her two children. The prosecution relied on evidence from Professor Sir Roy Meadow, whose evidence was later discredited. Chadwin appeared unsuccessfully for Donna Anthony on her first appeal, but illness prevented him representing her on her second, successful, appeal. Amongst his civil cases, "Miller v. Jackson " was a Court of Appeal decision on whether a cricket club was liable innuisance andnegligence to neighbouring residents when sixes were hit by players into their garden. Chadwin represented the neighbours and obtained an award of damages, although theinjunction that had been granted at trial against the cricket club was overturned on appeal.Chadwin, who was married with four children, died in 2006. His obituary in
The Times described him in this way:References
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