Appeal opens the way for complex UK fraud trials

The UK Court of Appeal has overturned the decision earlier this month to halt a fraud trial because of a barristers' boycott over government cuts to legal aid

The Royal Courts of Justice
Royal Courts of Justice, London

A Court of Appeal decision today has reopened the way for complex trials, such as the trial of those accused of rigging the Libor interbank rate, to proceed in English courts.

Judge Anthony Leonard acted too quickly in his decision on May 1 to halt the trial of five men accused of a land bank fraud, R. v Crawley and others, because cuts to legal aid payments for complex cases had left the defendants unable to find a defence counsel, the Court of Appeal's judge Brian Leveson wrote today. The

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