Barrister fined for drinking alcohol in court car park during break

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By Lydia Fontes on

8

£3k

Snaresbrook Crown Court – credit: Cassianto/Wikicommons

A barrister has been fined £3,000 by the Bar Tribunals & Adjudication Service after he was reported to be drinking alcohol in his car during a break in a criminal trial.

Dominic Charles D’Souza was representing a client at Snaresbrook Crown Court in North East London when, during a break in proceedings, he consumed alcohol in his car which was parked in the court’s carpark. The tribunal does not disclosed what exactly he drank.

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When this behaviour was reported to the judge, D’Souza withdrew from the case, following which the jury was discharged and a new trial date was fixed.

D’Souza, a tenant of London’s Goldsmith Chambers, admitted all three charges against him, conceding that he had behaved in a way likely to diminish public trust in his profession, as well as wasting the time of the court and foreseeably interfering with the administration of justice.

The barrister was fined £3,000, £1,000 on each charge, and ordered to pay £2,670 in costs, although the findings and sanction remain open to appeal.

8 Comments

Peter

Oh for the days when justice ruled and this was mandatory….

Wiz Key

Hard to take a view on this without knowing exactly what alcohol was consumed…

Barrister of Counsel

Blimey!

Was it because he was in his car or has the customary lunchtime glass of wine now suddenly become a problem?

Anonymous

Whilst this might be a grey area, one could only assume that in live case, with break in proceedings, could be constitute as drinking at work, which to all extent is a rule that guided other employment rules.

Again, it’s a grey area, without the full facts.

Jonathan

I dont get it.
If he had been seen drinking at the Dog and Partridge down the road. Would that be an offence?
And sherry or wine is commonly served at lunch in the judges dining room in many crown courts.
Unless his performance in court was adversely affected what is his real offence?

Anonymous

Must have been a question of how much and whether he admitted it affected his capability to properly represent his client. After all its not unknown for both Judges and lawyers to go to the pub for lunch and they are not all having a club soda.

The full judgement is available somewhere. He was drinking brandy.

T11

Top lad.

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