Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Holding onto Hope: Gina Rinehart's Bleak House ... Seeking chunks of the huge iron ore pit, Hope Downs ... Tracing the tangled Wright, Hancock, Rinehart litigation ... Allegations of fraud against the family trust ... Manouvering ... Tax "advice" ... Shifting vesting date ... Money, the root of unhappiness ... Anthony-James Kanaan reports ... Read more >> 

Politics Media Law Society


Pastoral care ... Election free content … Cardinal sins … The Pope leaves behind the wreckage of his predatory priests … The law keeps victims in check … Litigation loopholes … Latest cases … Catholic Church’s battle to keep the money ... Read on >> 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

"Invasion" of the United States ...Trump deportations ... Detention in gulags ... How much of an enemy does an alien have to be? ... Trump judge turns the tables ... Bush's war on terror shows the way ... Forum shopping for habeas cases ... Roger Fitch files from Washington ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Justinian is taking a break during May ... Normal operations will recommence in June ... 

Justinian's Bloggers

Conclave Part 2: Return of the Prodigal ... Vatican fraudster returns ... And departs ... Another struck-off Cardinal re-emerges ... Blowflies in the Conclave ointment ... What can go wrong? ... Silvana Olivetti reports from Rome ... Read more >> 

"We're in unchartered territory here. A Pope hasn't died before during an Australian election campaign."  

Jane Norman, National Affairs Correspondent, ABC News ... April 21, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Letter from London ... Voting at Australia House ... Polling at the Vatican ... Holding down three public service jobs at once ... LibDems want to tone down the noise ... How to foul-up a cover-up ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt on the case in Blighty ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

Judgment of the week ... Justice Ian Harrison in the NSW Supremes dismisses apprehended bias application ... Facebook posts by judge's tipstaff ... Claim made by family values applicant that HH's associate supports gay rights ... Battle with a noted sexual equality campaigner ... Purple pride ... Jurisdictional issue ... Finding that cases are decided by judges, not their staff ... From Justinian's Archive, May 10, 2019 ...  Read more >> 


 

 

« Wendler in Bordeaux | Main | The Waterlow killings »
Wednesday
Jan162013

Felicity Gerry

With sex crimes so much in the news it's felicitous that London barrister Felicity Gerry has, for the time being, fetched-up in Darwin ... The co-author of The Sexual Offences Handbook has some thoughts about the McClellan Royal Commission, and what makes for an effective hangover cure 

FELICITY GERRY is an international criminal barrister based in London at 36 Bedford Row. She is currently visiting Darwin, because her husband is working on the Ichthys LNG Project. 

Felicity Gerry: Cakes and MarmiteShe prosecutes and defends serious and complex murder, rape and fraud cases. She is regarded as a "rape specialist advocate". 

Gerry is described in Legal 500 as "tenacious in court ... an expert in the field of sexual offences".

She is the co-author of The Sexual Offences Handbook, published 2010. She is also "Of Counsel" to a US Law Firm and visiting counsel to William Forster Chambers in Darwin.

Gerry is a well-versed legal media commentator, regularly appearing on BBC TV and radio and Sky News as well as writing for the broadsheets.

She has a regular column in Criminal Law and Justice Weekly and is currently appearing on the Crime and Investigation Network in the Evil Up Close series

There's more here

Right now she's on Justinian's Couch ... 

Describe yourself in three words.

The Wicked Witch!

What are you currently reading?

"Criminal Laws of the Northern Territory," by Stephen Gray and Jenny Blockland. As I am visiting William Forster Chambers in Darwin, it seemed important to get to grips with local law. 

What's your favourite film?

"Gone With the Wind" - I like a challenge. 

Who has been the most influential person in your life?

The late Mr Justice Hunt QC [not former Justice David Hunt, NSW Supremes]. I started my pupillage in a Magistrates Court in a small market town where he was leading my pupil supervisor in a murder by poisoning. It was better than the TV. Later he was the judge in a complicated murder case of mine where the defendant had absconded to Nigeria. He was a formidable advocate who once said "no good circus ever crept into town".

What is your favourite piece of music?

"Somewhere Over the Rainbow", sung by Eva Cassidy. 

What is in your refrigerator?

Ask my husband - I don't shop or cook. 

What is your favourite website?

Twitter

What do you recommend as a hangover cure?

Children - they reduce the chances of having a hangover at all. 

What words or phrases do you overuse?

Where's my phone?

What is your greatest weakness?

Cake!

Why have you specialised in prosecuting and defending sexual offences cases?

I had a lucky break defending youths at the beginning of my career and found I was skilled at advocacy involving vulnerable people, whether they are witnesses or defendants. 

What effect has this work had on you emotionally?

It takes a certain sort of person to prosecute or defend these cases, usually one with an ability to separate work from home. Some cases inevitably affect you more than others but it is important to ensure cases are tried properly on evidence, not emotion.

What do you think should be the most important thing to come out of the McClellan Royal Commission? 

That complaints are taken seriously and robustly prosecuted and myths about stereotypical rapists or victims are well and truly busted. 

What would you change about the way the law deals with sex offences?

The modern law, practices and procedures are far more effective than the old law in dealing with sexual offending. Judicial directions should develop to help improve the understanding of the general public who sit on juries. Trial advocates should be instructed to advise at an early stage of the investigation and it ought to be made simpler to prosecute cross jurisdictional cases where offenders rape and abuse in different countries or states.

What's your most glamorous feature?

My smile. 

If you were a foodstuff, what would you be?

Marmite. 

What human quality do you most distrust?

Dishonesty. 

Whom or what do you consider overrated?

At the risk of alienating my colleagues - male barristers and judges. This is not to say they are ineffective, but to point out that successful women at the criminal bar and on the bench are still sadly too rare. 

What would your epitaph say?

She worked too hard. 

What comes into your mind when you shut your eyes and think of the word "law"?

Rumpole of the Bailey. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.