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The Common Serjeant of London (Currently vacant)
The judge was the Common Serjeant of London, Brian Barker, QC.
He was the son of Sir Frederick Albert Bosanquet, the Common Serjeant of London.
Formerly, the Common Serjeant of London was a legal officer of the City Corporation of London.
But the Common Serjeant of London, Judge Brian Barker, described Dwomoh's actions as a "misguided obsession".
His liberal principles had caused his exclusion from office till in 1822 he was appointed Common Serjeant of London by the corporation of London.
An Assistant Liveryman is Nicholas Hilliard, QC, the present Common Serjeant of London.
The Recorder's deputy is the Common Serjeant of London, appointed by the Crown on the recommendation of the Lord Chancellor.
In August 1892 Sir William Charley resigned as Common Serjeant of London and Fulton was appointed his successor.
The previous Common Serjeant of London, His Honour Judge Brian Barker QC, took his place.
Messam (21) showed no emotion at the Old Bailey as the Common Serjeant of London, Judge Robert Lymbery, told him he terrified his victims into submission at gunpoint.
His legal career began in 1536 when he was appointed Common Serjeant of London on the recommendation of Henry VIII; how he gained such royal favour is unknown.
The Common Serjeant of London attended on the Lord Mayor of London and the Court of Aldermen on court days, and acted with them in council.
The most senior permanent judge of the Central Criminal Court has the title of Recorder of London, and his deputy has the title of Common Serjeant of London.
After serving as recorder of Grantham and of Coventry, he became a full-time judge in 1964, presiding over criminal cases at the Old Bailey as the Common Serjeant of London until 1979.
He is the son of Mervyn Griffith-Jones QC, who was the prosecutor at the Lady Chatterley trial and the Common Serjeant of London at The Old Bailey.
His Hon. Judge Brian John Barker, QC (born 1945) is a British judge and the former Common Serjeant of London, the second most senior judge at the Old Bailey.
Barker was appointed as the 79th holder of the post of Common Serjeant of London (the second most senior judge at the Old Bailey) in 2005, succeeding Judge Peter Beaumont QC.
In 1526 he was nominated for the post of Common Serjeant of London, the capital city's senior legal officer, by the mayor and aldermen of London, although he was unsuccessful in the face of competition from a royal nominee.
In 1900 he was appointed Common Serjeant of London, an ancient office first recorded in 1291 with the appointment of Thomas Juvenal, and the second most senior judicial position at the Old Bailey after the Recorder of London.
Sir Frederick Albert Bosanquet, KC, JP (8 February 1837-2 November 1923) was the Common Serjeant of London, the second most senior permanent judge of the Central Criminal Court after the Recorder of London.
The twelve jurors sat in judgement on a four-day unscripted trial in a real courtroom, presided over by a real judge - the recently retired Common Serjeant of London, His Honour Neil Denison QC - with real barristers prosecuting and defending.
His Honour Judge Nicholas Richard Maybury Hilliard QC, MA, (born 1959 in Yeovil in Wiltshire) is the 80th Common Serjeant of London, an ancient and senior legal post at the Old Bailey second only to that of the Recorder of London.