|
|
|
David Wolchover Call: Gray's Inn, 1971
David Wolchover was head of Chambers at 7 Bell Yard from 1999 until early 2008. He helped to steer the ship during some difficult times and has helped to enable Chambers to develop into the fantastic product it is today. Although David stepped down as Head of Chambers in 2008 he continues to support Chambers and is still available for work.
He has always specialised in crime. Although his attitude on
law reform is progressive, not to say in many respects radical, he is an ardent
supporter of the independent Bar and the traditional system of barristers
undertaking both prosecution and defence work. Like many of his generation, he
only defends although he has absolutely nothing against prosecuting. It is just
that he feels more comfortable in defence. It was the same when he played for
his school First Eleven. "It's probably something deep-rooted in my psyche. It's
the challenge of facing an attack by superior forces." In his fifties he is
content to remain a humble junior - "not that I have much of a choice in the
matter" - but he does think there is something rather silly about labelling a
man of his age a "junior". Like an ageing thespian, he says, still aspiring to
take on romantic leads. But he is no stranger to "top barristers' work," having
led in murder and having defended in the Britannia Park trial, by far the
longest criminal trial in English legal history ("I attribute the length -18
months- to the prolixity of others," he says modestly). David is one of those
few barristers who has managed to span the sometimes difficult divide between
the rough-and-tumble of practitioner life at the coal face of criminal justice
and the contemplative pursuit of academic writing, a task perhaps made easier in
his case by the lack of affiliation to any academic institution. In his time he
has contributed a host of learned articles on criminal evidence and procedure to
a variety of law journals, as well as finding time to produce a number of full
length treatises. He is sole author of The Exclusion of Improperly Obtained
Evidence (Barry Rose Publishers, 1986), lead author of Wolchover and
Heaton-Armstrong on Confession Evidence (Sweet & Maxwell 1996), co-author with
Neil Corre of Bail in Criminal Proceedings (2nd ed, Blackstone Press, 1999; 3rd
ed, Oxford University Press 2004), contributing co-editor of Analysing Witness
Testimony (Blackstone Press, 1999), and sole author of Silence and Guilt: An
assessment of case law on the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 (Lion
Court Lawyers, 2001). His latest work, a treatise entitled Visual Identification
Procedures Under PACE Code D, is published on-line and can be accessed via his
own website www.davidwolchover.co.uk, as can the supplements to soem of the
above titles. An acknowledged expert on PACE, he has been instrumental through
direct representation and through his writing in securing a number of important
improvements to the Codes of Practice. He says that his proudest achievement is
having co-authored the first detailed critique (in the New Law Journal) of the
Government's proposal to curtail the right to jury trial, the arguments in which
were widely adopted ("without attribution needless to say," he says, wearily).
|
|
|


