contact us
Please fill in the form below to send us a message.
Young Street Chambers 76 Quay Street, Manchester M3 4PR
Tel: 0161 833 0489
Fax: 0161 835 3938
DX: 25583 Manchester 5
Email: clerks@young-st-chambers.com
Young Street Chambers
76 Quay Street, Spinningfields
Manchester M3 4PR
Tel: 0161 833 0489
Fax: 0161 835 3938
DX: 25583 Manchester 5
Email: clerks@young-st-chambers.com
Please fill in the form below to send us a message.
Young Street Chambers 76 Quay Street, Manchester M3 4PR
Tel: 0161 833 0489
Fax: 0161 835 3938
DX: 25583 Manchester 5
Email: clerks@young-st-chambers.com
Subscribe to our news feed
David James represents a lorry driver sentenced to two years imprisonment for causing the death of a mother of three having driven his lorry into the rear of a queue of stationary traffic. Read more
On the 26th of February, 2010 Aaron Strorey, represented by Ahmed Nadim, was found not guilty of an involvement in a conspiracy to murder after a trial lasting 5 weeks at the Crown Court sitting in Sheffield. The allegation arose from a gangland type ‘drive by’ shooting in which one person died and two others were seriously wounded.
Young Street Chambers are delighted to have been named as a finalist for Barristers Chambers of the Year at the inaugural Manchester Legal Awards to be held on 4 March 2010. MEN: Debut legal award finalists are revealed
Ahmed Nadim defended Imran Mohamed Haji Patel at Leicester Crown Court. Patel and another businessman admitted to fradulent trading and money laundering.  Mr Patel avoided a custodial sentence in this substantial fraud case, although the co-accused was given a prsion sentence. In mitigation, the court heard the defendants initially ran their businesses legitimately before becoming embroiled in the scam at the behest of others. Ahmed Nadim, for Patel, said his client was recruited for money-laundering purposes, with the offer of money but made no profit. Read more
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:16:53 -0000 Photography under threat: The shooting party’s over
The authorities have the power to confiscate your camera — or even arrest you — for daring to take a picture in public, mainly because of wide and misused powers in the Terrorism Act of 2000. ::: Times
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:16:37 -0000 COMMENT: Can Jon Venables have a fair trial?
Baroness Butler-Sloss, the judge who granted life-long anonymity to the killers of the two-year-old James Bulger, has warned that Jon Venables could be murdered if his new identity is revealed ::: Times
The Supreme Court has responded to a call from the Court of Appeal for a review of the rules on child witnesses in care proceedings by scrapping the presumption that children should not give oral evidence. ::: Solicitors Journal
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:16:06 -0000 Bid to scrap ancient right of entry laws, many still be in force
An ancient law allowing people on private land without a warrant if they are following a bee might still apply and is one of 1,208 powers of entry in dozens of different Acts of Parliament unearthed by a Tory peer who has launched a bid to curb the wide-ranging powers. ::: BBC
Wed, 10 Mar 2010 07:15:45 -0000 Law firms prepare to float on the stock market
City law firms are preparing to raise millions of pounds from external investors as the British legal market braces for its own version of Big Bang. ::: Times
A council golf course near the Tees estuary in Redcar must be registered as a ‘town green’ under the Commons Act 2006, the Supreme Court has ruled. ::: Solicitors Journal
powered by zFeeder