Paul Mendelle KC > 25 Bedford Row > London, England > Barrister Profile

25 Bedford Row
LONDON
WC1R 4HD
England

Living Wage

Position

Paul Mendelle KC is a respected and impressive criminal silk who practices exclusively in defence. He has extensive experience of the most serious and high-profile cases His criminal and quasi-criminal work includes murder, fraud, corruption, organised crime and money laundering, with special emphasis on cases involving complex expert/scientific evidence. Paul’s disciplinary and regulatory work includes representing financial and sports professionals.

Career

  • Called 1980
  • AppointedSilk 2006

Memberships

  • Criminal Bar Association
  • South Eastern Circuit
  • Bar Council Ethics Committee

Education

Law LLB, London.

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > Crime

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 1

Paul Mendelle KC – 25 Bedford Row ‘Paul is an extremely able advocate. He is an astute tactician with a fearsome intellect and has a very smooth style of advocacy, defending his clients to great effect. He also has a first-class legal mind.’

25 Bedford Row is a powerhouse criminal defence set with ‘talented barristers at every level of call’. George Carter-Stephenson KC has recently acted in several high-profile cases, including R v McSweeney, with the defendant sentenced in December 2022 to life imprisonment with a minimum of 38 years for the sexual assault and murder of Zara Aleena. Paul Mendelle KC represented a man acquitted of both murder and manslaughter of a man who featured in a BBC Panorama documentary on gang violence in 2007 – two other defendants were convicted. Matthew Radstone is involved in the first prosecution brought under the Political Parties, Elections, and Referendums Act 2000, following alleged electoral offences by a former Conservative MP said to have received illegitimate political donations from the defendant, against a backdrop of the disappearance of money said to be a loan for the redevelopment of Northampton Town’s stadium Sixfields. Kate Chidgey successfully represented a female nurse working at the high-security psychiatric hospital Broadmoor, who was acquitted on five counts of causing or inciting a person with a mental disorder impeding choice to engage in sexual activity – the defence case was that the male resident had planted her blood in his underwear with a used sanitary product extracted from a bin.