Sir Ivan John Lawrence KC (born 24 December 1936) is a former British Conservative Member of Parliament and criminal barrister.
Ivan Lawrence | |
---|---|
Chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee | |
In office 15 July 1992 – 21 March 1997 | |
Preceded by | John Wheeler |
Succeeded by | Chris Mullin |
Member of Parliament for Burton | |
In office 28 February 1974 – 8 April 1997 | |
Preceded by | John Jennings |
Succeeded by | Janet Dean |
Personal details | |
Born | Brighton, Sussex, England | 24 December 1936
Political party | Conservative |
Alma mater | Christ Church, Oxford |
Profession | Law |
Early life and legal career
editBorn in Brighton, Lawrence was the only child of parents of Russian-Romanian Jewish descent.[1] Alma Cogan, a successful singer of traditional pop music in the post-war period, was his cousin.[2] Lawrence was educated at the former Brighton, Hove and Sussex Grammar School and is President of the School's Old Boys' Association. He read Jurisprudence at Christ Church, Oxford, where he became president of the Oxford University Progressive Jewish Society.[1] From 1955 to 1957, he did National Service in the RAF and served in Malta during the Suez Crisis.[2]
Called to the Bar by the Inner Temple in 1962, Lawrence was pupil to James Burge, the leading criminal junior who represented Stephen Ward in the Profumo trials; was appointed Queen's Counsel in 1981; a Recorder of the Crown Court in 1985 (serving for 19 years); a Bencher of the Inner Temple in 1990; elected Head of Chambers at One Essex Court; and was knighted in 1992.[3] He has defended in over 90 murder trials, and has appeared in many notable criminal trials, being, for example, Junior Counsel for the Kray twins (gang-land murders), leading counsel for the serial killer Dennis Nilsen, Russell Bishop (Brighton Babes in the Wood murder),[1] the Mountnessing silver bullion robbery, the Brink's-Mat gold bullion money-laundering, and trials involving such gangland notables as "Mad" Frankie Fraser and Joey Pyle. He successfully appeared for the Defence in a mass-murder war crimes trial at The Hague and for the snooker champion Quenten Hanne charged with rape. He has been partly responsible for a number of improvements in Criminal Justice such as the introduction of tape recorded police interviews with suspects and the law against suspicious transactions.
In the field of international human rights, he played a prominent and successful part in the campaign to release a million Jews from the Soviet Union, the release of thirty-two Egyptians imprisoned under President Mubarak, and the release from imprisonment, and subsequent installation as President of the Maldives, of Mahommed Nasheed. Most recently he has annually co-chaired the Cambridge International Symposium on Economic Crime at Jesus College. He was elected Head of Chambers at One Essex Court.
Political career
editLawrence, having twice unsuccessfully stood for the Peckham constituency in 1966 and 1970, was elected MP for Burton in February 1974. He held the seat until May 1997 when he lost to Labour's Janet Dean.
He was a member of the Conservative Monday Club in 1973 when in the autumn of that year he had contributed an article to Monday News on the subject of "The Problem of State Subsidised Strikers". He is listed as a Club MP in May 1975,[4] in a Club office list as one of their MP members in July 1976, and in a Club members' circular as one of its members standing for re-election to Parliament for Burton in the General Election on 9 June 1983. He has also been an active member of the Conservative Bow Group for over 50 years and has contributed to many of its publications over that period.
In Parliament he was Chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee from 1992 to 1997 and Chairman of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (UK Branch) from 1995 to 1997. He was a member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee from 1982 to 1992, and served on a number of other Parliamentary Committees concerned with health, employment, social services, law and order and the consolidation of statutes. He was a founder member of the European Research Group, the originating force behind Brexit.
He was Chairman of the Conservative Friends of Israel,[1] was a member for several years of the Executive Committee of the 1922 Committee, which represents Conservative backbenchers. His private member's bill in 1991 instigated the National Lottery, and in 1985 he made the longest speech in Parliament that century (on the Water Fluoridation Bill).[1]
Post-parliamentary career
editLawrence is now a member of 5 Pump Court Chambers, a Fellow of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies, was an elected member of the Bar Council (2004–2010) and is Visiting Professor of Law at the University of Buckingham.[1] He was admitted to the degree of Doctor of Laws "Honoris Causa" by the University in March 2013. In April 2015, he became a Visiting-Professor at the BPP University Law School. He is well known as an after-dinner and cruise-line speaker. His memoir, My Life of Crime: cases and causes, was published by Book Guild on 30 September 2010 and reprinted in paperback on 1 February 2012.[2]
He is a Freeman of the City of London, Vice-President of the Society of Conservative Lawyers, President of the Spelthorne constituency Conservative Association, was a deputy for the Board of Deputies of British Jews for 40 years, and was a trustee of the Holocaust Educational Trust.[1]
Personal life
editHe married Gloria, whom he had met at the Oxford University Progressive Jewish Society, at the West London Synagogue in April 1966. She died of brain cancer, following terminal lung cancer, on 4 October 2016.[1] They had one daughter, Rachel Lawrence, a criminal barrister for 21 years, an amateur actress, pianist, a former CF Achiever of the Year and who even once appeared on ITV's Blind Date. She died of lung failure caused by cystic fibrosis, aged 45 years on 6 September 2013.[5][6]
In popular culture
editLawrence was portrayed by Pip Torrens in Des, a 2020 docudrama focusing on Dennis Nilsen.
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h Horwich, Aimée (2010). "Profile: Criminal mastermind Sir Ivan showing no signs of stopping". Jewish Telegraph. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
- ^ a b c Hayes, Jerry (8 January 2012). "A splendid life of crime". The Spectator. Retrieved 12 June 2022.
- ^ "No. 52952". The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 June 1992. p. 2. (United Kingdom)
- ^ Copping, Robert, The Monday Club – Crisis and After, London, May 1975, p.25.
- ^ Walker, Tim (11 September 2013). "Sir Ivan Lawrence is 'devastated. by the death of his brave daughter". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 30 December 2014.
- ^ "Ex-MP's daughter dies after getting engaged". The Jewish Chronicle. 12 September 2013. Retrieved 12 June 2022.