Mr Wrong

I obtain the case papers for Mr Wrong, a regular client of my comrade and current guest of Yanbury Constabulary. Unfortunately, my comrade was currently enjoying a family holiday in Scotland and my hopes of an early finish to catch the 1:45pm race at Ripon Races we’re hanging by a thread.

Mr Wrong, the inconsiderate little bastard, had according to the papers decided to steal a toaster and in the process, breach his bail conditions imposed for a previous offence of theft. I tuck the case papers under my arm and check the court list. My heart sinks. District Judge Bard, a heartless swine and infamous for taking an age over the shortest case, is sitting. Realising I have as much chance of springing Mr Wrong as I have of winning the National Lottery, I hop to the cells.

“You are going to get remanded,” I state, getting straight to the point.
“Wrong!” Mr Wrong retorted immediately.
“The DJ will not be impressed that you have breached your bail already..”
I attempt to clarify. Mr Wrong does not appear to be impressed and whilst eyeing me up and down as though I am a piece of dog shit on his shoe, stops me mid-flow once more by shouting “Wrong!” at the top of his voice.
“Not only that, you have now been charged with another offence of theft, in breach of your bail, and your ninety six convictions…” I highlight but Mr Wrong, now scrunching his face and red with anger, is not in the mood for logic and instead shouts “Wrong!” at the top of his voice.

A little perplexed, I feel a rage start to build inside my gut. I briefly fantasise about knocking Mr Wrong’s last few remaining teeth out of his head, but instead of acting on my desires, I decide on one last try. “So, I can apply for bail, but the DJ will most likely remand you in…” I continue firmly. “Wrong, wrong, wrong!” Mr Wrong screams in response.

Realising Mr Wrong lives in alternative reality and conscious that my early finish is at risk with this lunatic, I reassess the situation. “You won’t get remanded, the DJ will be delighted you have breached your bail, your ninety odd convictions for similar are irrelevant, I clearly haven’t a fecking clue and you probably won’t go to prison for the new offence of theft,” I scream back after concluding that this fuckwit needs some of his own medicine.
“Legend,” Mr Wrong responds as I walk out of the cell door. Not quite sure what had just happened, I waste no time in getting the case called on and seemingly persuading District Judge Bard that a remand in custody is the only viable option. Oh well.

Shit for Luck

After a night on call and several horrendously timed telephone calls from the Duty Call Centre, I am not feeling my best. I arrive for our monthly crime meeting needing a large coffee and wanting to throw myself off the nearest tall building. I try and pretend that I am listening to the latest ‘team building’ rhetoric but to be honest the boss knows criminal law is fecked, I know it’s fecked, my comrades know it’s fecked, the police definitely know its fecked and the government, well they have fecked it.

I admire the boss’ efforts to motivate us, but eventually gaze out of the window and try to decide in the absence of any hard evidence, how many quills a hedgehog has. It is surprising what pops in your head at times of complete undiluted boredom but the more I consider it, the more it becomes an important dilemma. I try and get this thought out of my head but to no avail. I deflect a question in relation to an amendment to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act, whilst I weigh up all hedgehog contributing factors. Size, species, sex – it is a surprisingly tough calculation. I eventually settle on 10,000 quills. A strategic search on google on my iPhone placed strategically under the desk, doesn’t help settle my now urgent query. I whisper discreetly in an effort to ascertain my comrade’s view. He tells me to ‘fuck off’, which I assume to mean he doesn’t really know.

Eventually, I have to engage when informed that I need to ‘sort’ Mr Do Not Give A Shite. His non-consensual visit to the local police cells had been communicated to the firm by a call I had apparently missed during the night. Luckily for Mr Do Not Give A Shite the call was accepted by an unwilling comrade, quite fairly annoyed at having been woken whilst not on call. The said comrade accepts my hollow apology for not manning the phone at 2.10am, but privately I am not sorry after fielding at least ten other calls from deranged clients and police officers across the county.

Partly to show a little willing but mainly because the ‘marketing tools we should be aware of’ now being discussed by our well meaning but gormless office manager is as appealing to me as a dose of the clap, I call the police station. A grumpy custody sergeant eventually answers, insisting I attend immediately as Mr Do Not Give A Shit is ‘causing fucking havoc.’ As diligent as ever, I comply with the sergeant’s wishes and attend, via Costa, Ladbrokes and the local newsagents.

When I eventually arrive, I am greeted by a group of familiar custody staff. Their ability to stand around whilst appearing to do absolutely feck all for substantial periods and without the slightest pang of embarrassment, is strangely commendable but hugely frustrating. When asked ask to find client’s property, locate medication, to phone for urgent medical attention and prevent a potential death – they normally respond with a blanket response of “busy.” A response that appears to be baseless and often proceeds with me fighting the urge to strangle one of them to death. But today they have an unusual urgency. One of the idle feckers, a quiet specimen apparently as happy in her job as I am in mine, ignores my slight attempt at an exchange of pleasantries and instead encourages Mr Do Not Give A Shite from his cell.

“Tiberius, if I get remanded, I’m throwing shit at the magistrates,” Mr Do Not Give A Shite proclaims to start our consultation. I am not generally caught off guard but this unexpected statement leaves me momentarily speechless. Rather than discuss the allegation, a suggestion that Mr Do Not Give A Shite had randomly and seemingly without any motivation or logical reason, smashed eight windscreens on his way home from the pub, I enter into a debate with Mr Do Not Give A Shite as to why the throwing of excrement was not ideal for all parties concerned. The confirmation that the police had managed to locate CCTV evidence seemingly proving Mr Do Not Give A Shite’s guilt, ended the debate – “Yep, I’m shitting myself.”

The subsequent police interview was quick with PC Been Doing The Job A Long Time realising the risk posed by this nut job and the fact my client’s refusal to comment or play any meaningful part in the interview process would continue. I spent the walk back to the office trying to think of reasons why I couldn’t do the magistrates court hearing that afternoon. Luckily, my boss volunteered, not in an effort to take one for the team, but in an effort to avoid the police station clients that would undoubtedly take hours. I gave him a quick run through of the case but avoided all reference to the literal shit storm brewing. I persuaded the three clients I dealt with that afternoon at the police station to make no comment in police interview. Not for any tactical reason, but more so I could get back to the office as soon as possible and wait for my boss. He returned just after 4pm.

“Filthy bastard,” my boss screamed, in a mixed tone of annoyance and distress, as he stood in reception with a bemused grey look on his face. His light grey suit had on close inspection a splattering of poo particles upon it and he smelt, quite unsurprisingly, like shite. I faked genuine concern as I asked him what had happened but he was in no mood for small talk, simply confirming that the announcement of the expected custodial sentence was closely followed by the launching of a baked, yet still slightly moist, shite. It hit the court clerk, causing maximum damage at the point of impact, but poo shrapnel hitting my boss and the prosecutor.

The well meaning receptionist started to spit in pieces of tissue and rubbing the numerous shit spots, but it seemed to make the stains worse, smearing them over a larger area. How I walked back into my office without passing out from laughter, I’ll never know. But I did. I closed my office door and laughed hysterically for at least twenty minutes, before composing myself and then laughing once more. Filthy bastard indeed.

Unwinnable Trial

Today I had what can only be considered an unwinnable trial. Unwinnable? Yes, completely and absolutely unwinnable. That case that every defence lawyer inherits that is beyond your powers of advocacy, expertise and persuasion. That case in your diary that you eye with distain as the date rapidly approaches. A trial date that perhaps does not quite fill you with dread, but one you look forward to just as much as a routine prostate examination. A case where you ponder case strategy with your colleagues whilst slurping numerous pots of coffee, brain storming on what the hell you can say to, firstly, make the client think you have tried your best, but secondly and much more importantly, to avoid making yourself look fecking stupid. A case with no logical defence, where any right-minded person would think ‘You know what, I am well and truly fecked.’ This was undoubtedly one of those very cases.

Hours, or perhaps minutes, of reading the statements had left me no nearer my goal of pulling off the great escape. I was devoid of inspiration. I had no helpful case law. I had no rabbits up my sleeve. Nothing that I could use to blow the prosecution case out of the water. Nadda. Zilch. Only one thing for it. A lesson they do not teach you in law school – the Tiberius ‘turn up and hope for the fucking best’ James defence.

On arrival, I realise that my client – Mr Hate All Authority – is late. A slight difficulty, as I need to speak to Mr Hate All Authority to work out what exactly he disagrees with in terms of the prosecution case. Granted this should have been done weeks ago, however Mr Mr Hate All Authority had presumably a more pressing requirement such as binge watching Jeremy Kyle, increasing his collection of horrendous tattoos or a concerted effort to add to his 85 convictions, anything other than attending for an appointment with me. His lack of giving a shit and refusal to attend my office, I feared, had removed the slightest chance we had to help him avoid a potential prison sentence. Oh well. A warrior’s death.

I checked the prosecution witness list with the elderly usher. “All present Mr James,”she scoffed. Bollocks. I am not a religious man, in fact this job is enough to turn any man away from religion, but I had long ago concluded that our only ‘prayer’ of winning was a no show by the prosecution witnesses. As I have shit for luck, the seven police officer witnesses led by Sergeant Bullied at School were of course all in attendance and presumably willing to give evidence on oath that Mr Hate All Authority was a lying bastard. A day of drinking coffee and putting their feet up, clearly appealing to Yorkshire Constabulary’s finest.

I quickly spot the said police officers on the court corridor. I stifle a laugh as I notice their new trendy police baseball caps. PC School Prefect and PC Personality of a Dog Shit look particularly ridiculous. I avoided eye contact, as I do not want to be a two-faced swine and wish them good day. I decide the only thing to do in the circumstances was to sit in a room titled “Solicitors Room” and read how the USA was unintentionally trying to goad the rest of the world into a nuclear war, whilst contemplating jumping out of the window and pissing off. Eventually the prosecutor locates me, a perfectly pleasant yet serious foe. Ignoring a joke at PC School Prefect’s expense, she insists on knowing what Mr Hate All Authority’s defence is. I respond honestly and immediately, “Not a bloody clue.” The prosecutor smiles, before realising I am serious. Very serious. Eventually my adversary walks off, a little perplexed that I have no intention of giving a feck in the absence of Mr Hate All Authority. She mutters something about the Criminal Procedure Rules as she walks away.

“I’m not having it. Not guilty,”
Mr Hate All Authority shouts at every opportunity on his arrival, twenty minutes after the trial should have started. Fighting the urge to punch him in his throat, I try and obtain some meaningful instructions. ” I wasn’t fucking driving alright,” he insists. A little distracted by the ‘only god can judge me’ tattoo now inked upon his hand, I pause for a moment. The irony. I eventually focus and read out the statements. As I do so, PC School Prefect choses that very moment to walk past the conference room and Mr Hate All Authority chooses to respond by shouting so that every person in the court building can presumably hear, “What the fuck is that on your head, you daft cunt?!”


Mr Hate All Authority points directly at PC School Prefect and directs further random insults, before collapsing in a fit of giggles. I try to pretend I want him to stop, but to be fair, it is relatively amusing. Distracted by the fashion faux paus of PC School Prefect, Mr Hate All Authority suddenly slips from his hard stance of innocence and proclaims,
“I wasn’t driving that fast. Wish I had of hit the fecker now.”

Superb. Guilty plea duly entered and the lay bench persuaded to impose a Community Order after Mr Hate All Authority suggests he is due to start working the week after next. Clearly a made up role and consequent miscarriage of justice but in my client’s favour for once. Not a bad day after all. File closed.