Rachel Turner > Miles & Partners LLP > London, England > Lawyer Profile

Miles & Partners LLP
88-90 MIDDLESEX STREET
LONDON
E1 7EZ
England

Work Department

Mental Health and Capacity

Position

Joint Managing Partner and Joint Head of Mental Health and Capacity

Career

Rachel is a recognised expert in mental health and mental capacity and has been actively involved in shaping the development of the law in this area.

She usually represents vulnerable individuals and is often instructed by the Official Solicitor or an advocate, as well as acting for private individuals and their families.

The types of cases that Rachel has been involved in include:

  • representing people who lack capacity in Court of Protection hearings where they are decisions need to be made about their residence, care, contact with others, medical treatment, and whether they have capacity to enter into marriage or sexual relations;
  • representing clients before a mental health tribunal if they have been detained under the Mental Health Act;
  • clients whose movements are restricted by Ministry of Justice;
  • challenging the lawfulness of decisions via judicial review cases in the High Court and Court of Appeal, such as in regard to exclusion zones or deprivation of liberty;
  • securing compensation for unlawful detention in a hospital or care home.

Rachel also has experience overseas having worked as an adviser to Uganda Law Society (ULS), Uganda Ministry of Health and the Uganda branch of the World Health Organisation on the human rights aspect of the proposed revisions to mental health law. While in Uganda Rachel co-founded the Mikwano Children’s Trust, a small English registered charity supporting poor and orphaned Ugandan children.

Languages

English

Memberships

Law Society Accredited Practitioner – Mental Health

Lawyer Rankings

London > Private client > Court of protection

The ‘committed, efficient and knowledgeable’ team at Miles & Partners LLP is jointly led by Rachel Turner and Floyd Porter . The specialist team regularly works on cases where there are issues of capacity, and concerns over the best interests of vulnerable adults who are unable to make fundamental health and welfare decisions themselves. It is frequently instructed by the Official Solicitor, Relevant Person’s Representatives and relatives to work on s21A cases to challenge deprivations of liberty. In addition, it is sometimes instructed to act on serious medical treatment cases. Andrew Bowmer has been promoted to the partnership and his expertise spans court of protection, housing and community care law.