First QC, Recorder of the Crown Court and Bencher of Afro-Caribbean heritage in the UK.
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- Leonard Woodley
Home › Celebrating Diversity at the Bar › Leonard Woodley
Leonard Woodley QC
1927 - 2020
Call 1963, Inner Temple
Leonard Woodley was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, in 1927. Raised by his paternal Grandmother, and an alumnus of the prestigious St Mary’s College, he demonstrated well rounded abilities in academia, music, and sport. After leaving school he became clerk, then commercial administrator, and it was during this time he met his first wife Lorna Bridgemohan. Together they had five children.
Leonard had a strong desire to study law and regretted that his schoolteachers didn’t support his academic ambitions. But in 1960, while in his early thirties, Leonard travelled to London where he initially took a diploma in international affairs at the University of London, and remarkably, was called to the Bar in 1963.
Leonard began practising in the chambers of Labour MP Dingle Foot and specialised in criminal law often dealing with cases which had a political or civil liberties element. He became involved in the famous cases of the Mangrove Nine (1970), cases relating to 1981 England Riots and the trial of the Newham Eight (1983). Leonard was made QC in 1988, becoming the first Black barrister to hold this position.
In spite of the many barriers broken to establish his legal career, this did not shield him from the racism he encountered in his professional and personal life. There were various instances of this which included being stopped by police while driving an open top car, reported to security by another judge wondering ‘why a black man was parking in the lot reserved for benchers’ and being accused of fraud when trying to withdraw cash from a bank. Before getting married to his second wife, Jennifer Bishop, (his first marriage ended in divorce after he moved to England) her father objected to the marriage on grounds of his race and cut all ties with the couple.
When Leonard started practising, it was time of great political and social turmoil around the world, and though he may not have been a front and centre activist, he used his position and influence in the courts to advance the lives of people of colour and vulnerable people in society. Whilst head of the John Benson’s Chamber (now known as 1MCB), the most ethnically diverse chambers at the Bar, he marked his support for the anti-apartheid struggle by inviting Nelson Mandela to be an honorary door tenant. Mandela accepted this honor, while serving a life sentence, and his name remained on the door until he became President of South Africa. The Leonard Woodley scholarship was established to support Black pupils at the Inner Temple and is still awarded to pupils today. Leonard’s compassion was also reflected during his time as Recorder sitting in the Crown Court (between 1989 and 2000), where he would always opt for non-custodial sentences if possible, and quietly ignored criticism of this approach.
Further into his career he chaired the 1995 Laudat inquiry, an investigation into a murder committed by an ex-prisoner released into the community without receiving adequate care or supervision. The report criticized several holes in the health care system and addressed poor communication between health workers, social workers, and prison authorities. In 1997 Leonard sat on the Royal Commission on long term care for the elderly, which examined the sustainable options for a system of funding for long-term care of elderly people.
Leonard Woodley died in January 2020.
Ayah Al-Rawni