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Episode details

World Service,18 Aug 2010,25 mins

18/08/2010

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Available for over a year

Courtenay Griffiths Courtenay Griffiths QC is a successful defence lawyer, who usually appears in courts in England and Wales. But at the moment, he's defending the former Liberian President Charles Taylor at his war crimes trial in the Hague. During his thirty year career as a barrister, Courtenay Griffiths has defended many high profile and controversial figures, from members of the IRA to a man wrongly accused of killing Damilola Taylor, a young black boy who died on a housing estate in London 10 years ago. Courtenay comes from a large family. He's the second youngest of a family of eight boys and one girl. He was born in Kingston, Jamaica and then the whole family emigrated to the UK in 1961, when Courtenay was 5 years old. He tells Matthew Bannister how early experiences of racism have shaped his rise to become such a successful defence lawyer.

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