Northpod Law & UKCLB Podcasts

Northpod Productions

NorthPod Law is a podcast that reviews the week's legal stories and news with a particular focus on how they affect the legal profession and the justice system of England & Wales. This show runs for six weeks and then takes a six week break throughout the year. It is hosted by barristers Benjamin Knight, Kirstin Beswick and Jonathan Holt. Each week, they will be joined by other lawyers and legal experts and, together, they will cast an eye over that week's legal twists and turns. ** Note to broadcast media producers: Our presenters are available for comment on legal matters in the public eye by contacting us at [email protected] - this address is monitored 24/7 ** When Northpod Law is off the air, this feed automatically redirects to Northpod's sister show, the UK Criminal Law Blog Podcast. UK Criminal Law Blog Podcast UKCLBP is a podcast by Dan, Lyndon and Sara - barristers who run the UK Criminal Law Blog. The podcast discusses and explains current cases and topics relevant to the

  • The Growing Prevalence of Prevalence - 25/05/16
    drugs.jpgIt's a case law episode for this Bite, which you can listen to right here.

    First, R v Bondzie.  Ever wondered why the Crown has taken to serving a statement that just tells you that drug dealing is bad?  Here's why they do it; what effect it could have on sentence; what they need to do to give it an effect and why their efforts to date have been generally pointless and probably damaging to their own aims.

    Then two quickies: R v Bala, which upholds marriage in all its forms and R v Hussain, in which the Court of Appeal confirms that you can't second-guess a jury.

    The Law Commission has reported on its sentencing code project.  If you want to read more you can do so here.

    Let us know whether you prefer the show like this or if you'd prefer to go back to listening to us drinking wine and eating cake.


    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    26 May 2016, 8:48 pm
  • Sexual Communications - 17/05/16
    maxresdefault.jpgListen to this week's show right here.
    This week, Kirstin examines the little heard of s.67 of the Serious Crime Act 2015 which creates a new offence of sexual communication with a child.  
    What is it?
    What does it cover?
    What does the Crown have to prove?
    What's the maximum sentence?
    And the perennial Northpod Law favourite, "Couldn't you just use the offences already on the statute books?"  
    Actually, that last one might have a bit of a surprising answer - although no doubt Ben wouldn't agree.​

    Let us know if you like the new "Bites" format (shorter and with less wine and cake) or if you are longing for a return to our longer format. If you are a law student, we'd be really grateful if you would spread the news of our show's return around your law school friends. Also, get in touch. We'd love to hear from you.

    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    17 May 2016, 7:39 pm
  • Defending Rob Titchner - 06/05/16
    Woman_crying_in_bathroom.jpg
    This week Kirstin's going through s.76 Serious Crime Act 2015.  It deals with coercive control - or domestic violence that's not that physical.  We use the scandalous plot of "The Archers" to briefly explain what can make up the background to these new cases.

    Take a listen right here.

    Then we go through the section to look at who can and can't be guilty of the offence and where the problems might lie in making it stick where there are no other offences.  Is this just a way of getting 5 years for common assault?

    We go on to look at the practicalities involved for a trial - problems the prosecution will face and the holes that might be worth poking at if you're defending.


    Let us know if you like the new "Bites" format (shorter and with less wine and cake) or if you are longing for a return to our longer format. If you are a law student, we'd be really grateful if you would spread the news of our show's return around your law school friends. Also, get in touch. We'd love to hear from you.

    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    9 May 2016, 11:06 am
  • Property is Theft - 25/04/16
    4345290755_604f42fa80_o.jpgIn this week's show, we take a look at the Sentencing Council's recent Theft Offences guideline. Take a listen right here

    Theft is probably the most common criminal offence that appears before the courts. Of course, there are several types of theft and attitudes towards shoplifting will be rather different than attitudes towards theft from the person. 

    Not just that but the courts of England and Wales arguably need to have their sentencing practices standardised so that justice is the same no matter where you are. 

    But of course, it just isn't that simple. 

    The new Guideline from the Sentencing Council sets out to fix it all but, in the process, really might make some things rather a lot worse...


    Let us know if you like the new "Bites" format (shorter and with less wine and cake) or if you are longing for a return to our longer format. If you are a law student, we'd be really grateful if you would spread the news of our show's return around your law school friends. Also, get in touch. We'd love to hear from you.

    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    25 April 2016, 10:32 pm
  • Done Over By Do-Overs? - 17/04/16
    carousel-181034_960_720.jpgIn this week's show, we take a look at what happens when juries cannot reach a verdict. Take a listen right here

    Many people, especially defendants, are quite horrified when they find out that the prosecution can decide whether it wants to have not just a second attempt but, sometimes, a third attempt!

    In this episode, we consider what the "sometimes" above actually means. 

    Let us know if you like the new "Bites" format (shorter and with less wine and cake) or if you are longing for a return to our longer format. If you are a law student, we'd be really grateful if you would spread the news of our show's return around your law school friends. Also, get in touch. We'd love to hear from you.

    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    17 April 2016, 8:56 pm
  • Butting Heads With Beavis - 10/04/16
    You can listen to this week's show right here.

    909_31_7772_web.jpgWe have been away for an absolute eternity but the wait is over!

    This week, we are looking at the Supreme Court decision in ParkingEye v Beavis (2015)

    This is a decision that will impact on most motorists at some point in their life and will have effects in contract law as it amends a fundamental doctrine of English law. 

    So, whether you are listening because you are looking into an unfair parking ticket or whether you are listening because you want to see how the Supreme Court has brutalised a long-standing legal doctrine, this brief analysis may help you. 

    Let us know if you like the new "Bites" format (shorter and with less wine and cake) or if you are longing for a return to our longer format. 

    If you are a law student, we'd be really grateful if you would spread the news of our show's return around your law school friends. Also, get in touch. We'd love to hear from you.

    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    10 April 2016, 6:48 pm
  • Series Break - 7th November 2014

    Dear Listeners of Northpod Law and of UK Criminal Law Blog Podcast

    From time to time, the fates conspire against us all and the absence of our last show of the series and the delay in the start of UKCLBP (as I am now calling it) is testament to this.

    We don't generally take a series break as you know but we need one at the moment.

    We have had people moving jobs, I have been beset with Whooping Cough (I know! How very 19th Century of me to get that as an adult)
    and we think that one of our number might actually have been abducted by a Ministry of Justice hitsquad.

    So, please accept our apologies and know that when UKCLBP (it'll catch on..) comes back next week, all will be well with the world of legal podcasting once more.

    In the meantime, we are thinking of doing a mailbag episode of Northpod Law.  If you have a burning question for any of us, now is the time to send it in.  [email protected] will do nicely.

    Thanks for listening.
    7 November 2014, 8:50 pm
  • S14E04 - Running Late, Sounding Adequate
    phone_3055984b.jpgThe episode that might never have happened is finally here.  You can listen right here.

    What with Ben being incapacitated, Kirstin being snowed-under and Jonathan having been abducted by aliens (some of this may not be true), a big dent has been made on our otherwise reliable schedule.  We apologise unreservedly.

    In this week's show, we have a look at R v Creathorne - an interesting case in which the question of how much credit ought to be given for a plea of guilty where the CPS hasn't handed-over the evidence at the time of the first hearing in the Crown Court.  This is crucial listening for lawyers and, just as much, for judges.

    Whilst bemoaning the CPS's failures in the service of papers, we congratulate them on a bit of sensible legal commentary on the subject of the need for new laws.

    Also, we look at judicial diversity and Kirstin takes a sideways look at a rather peculiar case from US Supreme Court about beards.

    Please enjoy and we hope normal service will be resumed this week.

    Links:
    https://www.crimeline.info/uploads/cases/2014/2014ewcacrim500.pdf

    http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/07/supreme-court-religion-prisoner-beard/16856023/

    http://www.theguardian.com/law/2014/oct/07/supreme-court-beard-hearing-justice-jokes-religious-rights

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11143699/Revenge-pornography-can-and-will-be-prosecuted-vow-CPS-lawyers.html


    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    19 October 2014, 6:17 pm
  • S14E03 - Rights and Wrong'uns
    European_Court_of_Human_Rights-_Av._de_l'Europe.jpgYou can listen to this week's show right here.

    This week's show is about the Tory plan to abolish the Human Rights Act and to put England and Wales (though not Scotland or NI, of course) outside of the direct constraints of International Human Rights law.

    It's a good job that Ben is still barely croaking otherwise this would no doubt have been an angry rant full of vitriol about our Home Secretary and Lord Chancellor.  Surely Kirstin will be far more calm about it...

    Of course, you might want to balance the Tory slandering of the Act and the ECHR against a few examples of what the law has meant for us.

    For a great collection of what to read about this to know more on both sides of the argument, please see the excellent compendium put together by David Allen Green.

    Not only that but it has been a little while since we heard what's going on in the world of immigration law.  There has been a report about the Home Office and its ability to do its job.  Spoilers, government subcontractors are not exactly thrilling us with their efficiency.  Jonathan Holt explains all.  Visit Bail For Immigration Detainees and read all about it.

    Next week should be a little more chatty assuming none of contract any other horrible illnesses.  


    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    5 October 2014, 5:24 pm
  • S14E02 - Corruption
    Gas_pump_lead_warning.jpgWith Ben still suffering from the Dreaded Lurgy and Jonathan being AWOL, Kirstin is left to man the battlements of Northpod Towers this week.  Have a listen right here.

    With all that is going in at the MoJ (for whom it has not been a good week!), we couldn't let that go by without a mention.

    But before we get to that, the rather interesting case of Serious Fraud Office v Miltiades Papachristos and Dennis Kerrison.  This case concerns a legal question about amending indictments and contains some rather odd twists and turns.

    All being well, we might even have a full team next week and we hope you'll join us then.


    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!
    27 September 2014, 2:21 pm
  • S14E01 - Power to the Victim
    Chris-Grayling_2469536b.jpg You can listen here!

    This week we scrabble around in the mud to bring you a frankly minimal offering of law.  It may have been the silly season but the law has (at least in this country) remained aloof and above such matters.

    Sadly this show was recorded before the Lord Chancellor was defeated in the High Court by criminal solicitors using judicial review - a system Grayling would like to seee abolished - and now we can see why.  He acted illegally.  That didn't stop his press office tweeting (like a petulant child) that it wasn't a complete victory for them but they did get to keep the 8.75% cut.  Not that that was the point of this particular action.  He's like this government's Comical Ali.
    Nevertheless, the bulk of this week's show does deal with another announcement by Chris Grayling.  He has been electioneering announcing what he's doing for complainants victims.  

    So what's new?  In our usual vein, this week Ben brings us a thoughtful report on the MoJ's recent publication.  Regular listeners may think they know where this is going...
    If you would like to read the two papers, then they are below.
    The 2013 Code of Practice
    The 2014 pamphlet



    PLEASE RATE/REVIEW US: wherever you subscribe, please take two seconds as we start this series, to give us some stars and a few kind words.  We'd be e'er so obliged.  It helps us get up the search rankings, ya see.  If you use iTunes, please click here and it'll take just seconds!


    19 September 2014, 4:48 pm
  • More Episodes? Get the App
© MoonFM 2024. All rights reserved.