Friday 18 April 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-BRITISH " CONSTANCE BRISCOE " IS A BARRISTER AND ONE OF ENGLAND's EARLIEST BLACK FEMALE RECORDERS :

                     BLACK               SOCIAL            HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                             Constance Briscoe (born 18 May 1957) is a barrister and one of England's earliest black female recorders; she is currently suspended from sitting in that office.

Legal career

Briscoe studied Law at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, financing her studies by having several jobs at weekends and during the holidays, including working with the terminally ill in a hospice. She took an MA at the University of Warwick and holds a Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of Wolverhampton.[1]
She was called to the Bar in 1983, and in 1996 became a recorder, a part time judge - one of the first black women to sit as a judge in the UK. Briscoe's legal practice focuses on criminal law and fraud, principally defending. She also undertakes tribunal work, public inquiries, inquests and acts as President of Mental Health Tribunals.[2] A room is now named after her in the Newcastle University Students' Union building.
In 2007 she applied to be made a QC but was turned down.[3]
In October 2012 Briscoe was suspended from the judiciary after having been arrested and questioned by police.[4]

Personal life

Born to two immigrants from Jamaica who settled in the United Kingdom in the 1950s, she was one of eleven children.[2] Constance's mother Carmen had seven children, including Constance, by her husband George Briscoe. She then had another four children by Garfield Eastman.[3]
Briscoe is known for her books Ugly and Beyond Ugly in which she claims she was abused as a child, which her mother denied. She often talks publicly about her experiences. Her mother, Carmen Briscoe-Mitchell, sued her daughter and her publishers Hodder & Stoughton for libel.[5] The case was concluded in Briscoe's favour, when a jury in the High Courtunanimously accepted Constance's argument that her allegations were substantially true.[6]
Briscoe lives in Clapham, with her two children from her earlier relationship, with lawyer Adam Wilson.[3] A long relationship with barrister Anthony Arlidge ended in 2010.[7]
She underwent facial and other cosmetic surgery because she perceived herself to be ugly.[3]

Arrest

On 6 October 2012, Briscoe was arrested in Clapham and subsequently bailed pending further enquiries, as a result of a police investigation. No announcement was made at that time as to the nature of any allegations against her.[4][8]
The Lord Chief Justice and Lord Chancellor have suspended Briscoe from the judiciary pending the outcome of the police investigation.[4][8]
In February 2013, at the trial of Vicky Pryce police stated that Briscoe's arrest related to the release of information to the press on behalf of Vicky Pryce contrary to statements Briscoe had made, and the police could not rely upon Briscoe as a "witness of truth". Pryce was a friend and neighbour of Briscoe. Briscoe had not been charged but remained on police bail.[9][10][11]
On 12 June 2013 it was announced she would be charged with two counts of intending to pervert the course of justice and will attend court on 24 June 2013. The first count alleges she provided police with two inaccurate statements, and the second alleges that she produced a copy of her witness statement that had been altered.[12]




































































































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