Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
[1] [2] However, as the number of court cases in the Stoke-on-Trent area grew, it became necessary to commission a more modern courthouse. The site selected by the Lord Chancellor's Department , on the east side of Bethesda Street, had accommodated a series of rows of terraced housing (John Street, Vine Street and Mollart Street) before the ...
Shares a building with Bournemouth Crown Court. Renamed Bournemouth and Poole when the court in Poole closed on 4 July 2011. [37] Bow: 15 March 1847: London The closure of the court was proposed by the Ministry of Justice in July 2015. [9] Bradford: 15 March 1847: North East Shares a building with Bradford Crown Court. Brecon: 15 March 1847: Wales
This is a list of the current titular and honorary recorders in the Courts of England and Wales, together with the Crown Court venue at which they sit. The title of honorary recorder is awarded by a borough council to a judge who sits at the Crown Court within or associated with their area. It is intended to mark the link between the administration and judiciary. Conventionally the title is ...
The two courtrooms were initially used for Quarter Sessions before the Courts Act 1972 created the Crown Courts of England and Wales. [2] The court closed in 2017 before re-opening after the COVID-19 pandemic, to deal with the case backlog, as a satellite court of Lewes Combined Court. [3] Today, the court hears criminal cases that are tried by ...
Hanley is one of the six towns that, along with Burslem, Longton, Fenton, Tunstall and Stoke-upon-Trent, amalgamated to form the City of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England. The town is the main business, commercial and cultural hub of the wider Potteries area.
Acting Judge District Court (1871–1873, 1875) [34] William Hattam Wilkinson: 21 September 1874: October 1893: 18–19 years: Deputy Judge District Court (1868–1870, 1874) Commissioner of the Court of Claims (1894–1905) [35] Ernest Docker: 5 January 1881: 31 December 1918 [g] 37 years, 360 days: Judge on Norfolk Island (1894) [36] Charles ...
“Women of Distinction celebrates the incredible women who dedicate their time, energy, and resources to others,” said event chairwoman Frances Fisher
It was subsequently converted for use as a crown court and as a venue for social security case hearings at a cost of £5 million, [14] [15] and was officially re-opened by the Senior Presiding Judge for England and Wales, Dame Julia Macur, as the Shrewsbury Justice Centre on 12 April 2019.