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Lawyers

Alex Benn

Alex Benn

Position

Alex Benn appears on behalf of people accused of crimes. Recent cases have seen Alex defend those charged with armed robberies, causing death by dangerous driving, causing grievous bodily harm, serious sexual offences, fraud by abuse of position and computer hacking.

In cases that are legally significant or high-profile in nature, Alex has been counsel for:

• the claimant in the first and only claim for judicial review to succeed in the law of bail appeals (R (Molina) v Snaresbrook Crown Court [2024] EWHC 816 (Admin); [2024] WLR 183 (DC));

• the defendant who accepted having thrown an egg at Charles III and who received a fine of £100; and

• the academic acquitted of harassing a member of the clergy, a case that involved the Bishop of London and an application to the Attorney General for a nolle prosequi, led by Riel Karmy-Jones KC.

Alongside appearing in court, Alex regularly advises (as sole or led counsel) defendants or other parties in relation to allegations of serious crime, including murder, terrorism and money laundering.

Before starting to practise, Alex achieved the highest results in law at the University of Oxford. Now a lecturer at University College and St Catherine’s College, Oxford, Alex’s academic work concentrates on the law and the theory of discrimination, particularly the issue of classism. With this profile, Alex is often instructed in cases involving difficult points of law and where the criminal law meets other areas of the law.

Alex usually uses ‘they/them’ pronouns and, when necessary, the gender-open title, ‘Mx’.

Career

Year of Call: 2021

Wronker Prize (for best overall performance in law), University of Oxford

Gibbs Prize (for best combined performance in contract, land, tort and trusts law), University of Oxford

Slaughter and May Prize in Criminal Law, University of Oxford

Red Lion Chambers Prize in Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Oxford

Planethood Foundation Prize in International Criminal Law, University of Oxford

Law Faculty Prize in Comparative Equality Law, University of Oxford

Wronker Prize in Tort Law, University of Oxford

Wronker Prize in Jurisprudence, University of Oxford

David Blank Scholarship, St Catherine’s College, Oxford

Graduate Scholarship, University College, Oxford

Lord Denning Scholarship, Lincoln’s Inn

Publications

Book Chapters and Journal Articles

‘Besting Monarchy: The Anti-Classism Argument’, 2023, The Political Quarterly ‘The Loss or Destruction of Evidence’ in D Young, Young, Corker and Summers on Abuse of Process in Criminal Proceedings, 2022, 5th edn, pp 80-118, with D Young ‘Classism as Hate Crime: Proposing Class as a Protected Ground in Criminal Law’, 2021, 10 Criminal Law Review 809 ‘The Big Gap in Discrimination Law: Class and the Equality Act 2010’, 2020, 3(1) Oxford Human Rights Hub Journal 30

Journal Case Notes and Comments

‘Henry VIII Power: R (Liberty) v Home Secretary’, 2024, 9 Criminal Law Review 653 ‘Manslaughter (Diminished Responsibility): R v Calocane’, 2024, 9 Criminal Law Review 667 ‘Loss of Control: R v Drake’, 2024, 4 Criminal Law Review 265 ‘Misconduct in Public Office: R v Ali’, 2024, 4 Criminal Law Review 269 ‘Malicious Communications: Freedom of Email? Elected Officials, Disability and Expression’, 2024, Journal of Criminal Law ‘Attorney General’s Reference on a Point of Law (No. 1 of 2022)’, 2023, 1 Criminal Law Review 58 ‘The “Colston Four”, Proportionality and the Concerns that Linger’, 2023, 87(1) Journal of Criminal Law 61 ‘R (Ngole) v Sheffield University’ 2018, 7(2) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 351 ‘R (A and B) v Secretary of State for Health’ 2017, 6(3) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 631 ‘Re JS (A Child)’ 2017, 6(2) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 413

Academic and Legal Websites

‘The International Court of Justice’s Order in South Africa v Israel’, 2024, Oxford Human Rights Hub ‘Anti-Classism Offers a New Way to Show Why Monarchy Is Wrong’, 2023, The Political Quarterly Blog ‘Criminalising Constitutional Debate? Anti-Monarchy Protests, Treason and Public Order’, 2023, UK Constitutional Law Association ‘The Coronation, the Public Order Act 2023 and “Free Speech”‘, 2023, Oxford Human Rights Hub ‘The “Colston Four” and the Walls of Criminal Trials’, 2022, Oxford Human Rights Hub ‘Discrimination in Criminal Justice: Four Analytical Steps for Lawyers’, 2021, Legal Lifelines ‘Classism, Hate Crime and the Law Commission’s Consultation Paper 250: Lessons from Discrimination Law’, 2021, Oxford Human Rights Hub ‘The Maya Forstater Case and So-Called “Gender Critical” Feminism: What Was Actually Decided and What Does It Reveal about UK Discrimination Law?’, 2020, Oxford Human Rights Hub, with C Devlin ‘The UK Supreme Court and the Gay Marriage Cake: Is “Indissociability” Half-Baked?’, 2019, Oxford Human Rights Hub

Newspapers and Other Press

‘Analysing Class at the Bar’, 2024, Counsel 34 ‘Is It Time for a Law to Ban Classism?’ (also published as ‘We Prosecute Racists and Sexists. So What about Classists?’), 2023, The Independent ‘Gender Non-Conformity at the Bar’, 2022, Counsel 15 ‘“Virginity Testing”, Hymen Surgery and Misogyny: What Should the Law Do?’, 2021, Counsel 38, with R Karmy-Jones QC ‘We Don’t Think John Finnis Should Teach at Oxford University. Here’s Why’, 2019, The Guardian, with D Taylor

Memberships

CBA

Lincoln’s Inn

Grade 2 Advocate Panel (Crown Prosecution Service)

Education

Law (Jurisprudence, BA), St Catherine’s College, Oxford: first-class honours

Bachelor of Civil Law (BCL), University College, Oxford: distinction