Richard Aikens

Sir Richard John Pearson Aikens PC (born 28 August 1948)[1] is a retired British judge, who was a Lord Justice of Appeal from 2008 to 2015.


Sir Richard Aikens
Lord Justice of Appeal
In office
19 November 2008  2 November 2015
Preceded byLord Justice Gage
Personal details
Born (1948-08-28) August 28, 1948

Career

Aikens was educated at Norwich School and St John's College, Cambridge, where he read history and law.[2][3] He was called to the Bar (Middle Temple) in 1973 and joined what is now Brick Court Chambers in 1974. He became a Bencher in 1994, and Queen's Counsel in 1986. He was appointed a Recorder in 1993.

On 6 May 1999, Aikens was appointed to the High Court of Justice, receiving the customary knighthood, and was assigned to the Queen's Bench Division. He was a judge of the Commercial and Admiralty Courts from 1999-2008, and was in charge of the Commercial Court in 2005-6). He was chairman of the Commercial Court Long Trials Working Party in 2006. On 19 November 2008, Aikens became a Lord Justice of Appeal,[4] and received the customary appointment to the Privy Council the same year. He retired as a Lord Justice of Appeal on 2 November 2015.[5]

After retirement as a judge, Aikens rejoined Brick Court Chambers as a door tenant.[6]

He is a Visiting Professor at Queen Mary University of London and King's College, London.

Aikens is a supporter of Brexit, writing "our ability to determine our own laws is picked apart by the EU and its unaccountable judges. For the future of our democracy, we should vote Leave".[7]

He is married with 2 sons and 2 step daughters.[3]

gollark: Unfortunately, this is not possible.
gollark: So I thought "what if I made the random stuff API secretly running 28% of osmarks.net even more convoluted by integrating a trivial LDAP server to just return some data from a config file, and also connecting this with the HTTP frontend for nginx subrequest authentication?".
gollark: However, OpenLDAP was very annoying.
gollark: It would be convenient if I had this "single signon" capability for osmarks.net internal systems.
gollark: Well, you know how many applications support authentication via LDAP?

See also

  • List of Lords Justices of Appeal

References


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