Nicholas Hearn > Chambers of Sally O’Neill and Michael Holland KC > London, England > Barrister Profile

Chambers of Sally O’Neill and Michael Holland KC
Furnival Chambers
16 Took’s Court
LONDON
EC4A 1LB
England
Nicholas Hearn photo

Position

Nicholas is a criminal barrister who enjoys complementary practices in extradition and crime (with an emphasis on fraud and cases with an international dimension). Nicholas also advises individuals who are (or fear they may be) the subject of Interpol Red Notices. He is co-author of “David & Hearn – A Practical Guide to Interpol and Red Notices” (published by Bloomsbury 2018). Nicholas can provide comprehensive advice regarding the procedure for obtaining information held by Interpol and applications for the deletion of such material and the lifting of Red Notices.

Nicholas is appointed to the Crown Prosecution Service list of external counsel at level 4.

 

Serious Crime

 

Current caseload and recent cases:

 

R v X and Ors (Southwark Crown Court – 2019) – instructed by the SFO (with Sean Larkin QC) to prosecute three individuals accused of bribery and corruption offences. The case concerned one of the first prosecutions of human defendants following a Deferred Prosecution Agreement entered into between a corporate defendant and the SFO.

 

R v Brzezinski and Ors (Birmingham Crown Court – 2018-2020) – instructed by the CPS Special Crime Division (with Caroline Haughey QC) to prosecute 7 individuals in what was estimated to be the largest modern slavery investigation in Europe (over 250 victims of human trafficking for the purposes of labour exploitation were identified). The investigation was featured by the BBC’s Panorama programme in September 2019.

 

R v Daryl Rowe (Lewes Crown Court – 2018) – instructed by the CPS special Crime Division (with Caroline Carberry QC) to prosecute an individual accused of deliberately infecting 10 men with the HIV virus. The case resulted in the first conviction for a s18 offence in the context of transmission of the HIV virus.

 

Extradition

Nicholas has practiced in the field of extradition law for over ten years. He has been ranked as a “Tier One Junior” for International Crime and Extradition by the Legal 500 for several years.

 

Nicholas has been instructed as a leading junior in the Divisional Court on two occasions (Vasilev v Bulgaria [2016] EWHC 1401 (Admin) and GS v Hungary [2016] 4 W.L.R. 33. In 2016, Nicholas appeared in the Supreme Court led by Mark Summers QC (Goluchowski & Sas [2016] UKSC 36).

 

Current caseload and recent cases:

 

India v Nirav Modi – instructed by the CPS on behalf of the Government of India (with Helen Malcolm QC) in relation to an extradition request for a high profile Indian businessman alleged to have defrauded an Indian bank of in excess of $1bn. 


India v KS
 – Instructed by the CPS on behalf of the Government of India (leading Catherine Brown) in relation to an individual accused of terrosit offencesin the punjab region of India.

 

Germany v ND  – Instructed by the CPS on behalf of the Government of Germany in relation to forthcoming Divisional Court proceedings concerning the impact of Germany’s decison to refuse to extradite its own nationals to the UK post-Brexit.

 

 

Nicholas also advises individuals who are (or fear they may be) the subject of Interpol Red Notices. Nicholas can provide comprehensive advice regarding the procedure for obtaining information held by Interpol and applications for the deletion of such material and the lifting of Red Notices.

 

Publications

 

Co-author of David & Hearn “A Practical Guide to Interpol and Red Notices” published by Bloomsbury (2018).

 

 

Nicholas accepts Public Direct Access instructions.

Career

Called 2007.

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > International crime and extradition

(Leading Juniors)Ranked: Tier 1

Nicholas HearnFurnival Chambers ‘Nicholas is diligent in understanding the material of a case so that he can deploy it effectively before the court.’

Furnival Chambers‘ members continue to receive instructions in a range of high-profile extradition cases, with many instructions coming from the CPS. Leading Nicholas Hearn, Joel Smith KC is representing the CPS in USA v Tahilramani, extradition proceedings concerning a person known to be ‘Hollywood Con Queen’, involving allegations of defrauding aspiring actors and film workers by pretending to be high-profile figures in the entertainment industry and luring them to Indonesia, where they would pay inflated fees to a driver. Julia Farrant acted for a Polish judicial authority in an extradition matter related to a multi-handed conspiracy to traffic people from Poland to the UK. In a test of the new post-Brexit legislative framework, Hannah Burton was instructed in Badea v Romania a case considering if Article 597 of the Trade and Cooperation Agreement mandates a specific proportionality assessment when considering whether extradition is compatible with Article 8 of the ECHR under s.21 of the Extradition Act 2003.