Rachel Brand KC

Year of Call: 1981
Year of Silk: 2000

Direct Access

In suitable cases she is happy to accept instructions direct from members of the public. Please see the Direct Access section of this website for further information.

Continuing Professional Development

Has lectured on a variety of topics, including sexual offences and issues of disclosure in such cases, trials of mentally ill defendants, the presentation of expert evidence.

Areas Of Specialism

Murder & Manslaughter, Sexual Offences

Career overview

Practice Summary

Rachel is a specialist criminal advocate, instructed by both prosecution and defence in the most serious cases, including homicide, drug and gang-related firearms offences and other organised crime, substantial armed robbery, sexual offences, and some large-scale dishonesty and fraud.

Details of practice

Has great experience of homicide cases involving the death of infants and young children, and the complex medical issues which can arise in such cases. Frequently instructed to represent vulnerable defendants, including those with a history of mental illness or significant learning disability, in murder trials involving issues of diminished responsibility.


Has particular expertise in allegations of rape and other serious sexual offences, and other cases involving DNA profiling evidence (appeared, as a junior, in R v Doheny and Adams 1997, leading case on statistical interpretation of DNA evidence). Instructions to prosecute have included substantial trials involving historic allegations of sexual offences, arising from large-scale police inquiries into local authority care homes.


Some of Rachel’s previous instructions include:

  • Serving police officer who had committed serious sexual offences (historic).
  • A man who used his vehicle as a weapon, causing catastrophic injuries to his ex-partner’s father, rendering him paraplegic.
  • Fraud by NHS dentists (defending).

Described in the Legal 500 (2012) as ‘able and well-respected. Chambers & Partners 2013: ‘She does a lot of heavyweight work, and is held in high regard as a senior silk’, 2014 entry ‘ … a great down-to-earth manner and a fierce intelligence’, 2018 edition ‘She has the ability to give closing speeches that are to the point, informative, and down-to-earth’.


Murder & Manslaughter

Defence:

  • Represented one of two defendants acquitted of the murder of Nicola Payne, a young woman who went missing in Coventry in 1991.
  • One of two defendants charged with murder, each blaming the other: acquitted, whilst co-defendant convicted of murder.
  • A woman charged (with her partner) with the murder of a young woman in the home all three of them shared.
  • One of two defendants charged with murder following the stabbing of a man in Coventry: acquitted.
  • Represented a woman acquitted of murder (who had pleaded guilty to manslaughter) in relation to the death of a man attacked in the street in Stratford-on-Avon, by 4 assailants.
  • A woman charged with attempted murder of her 6 day old infant daughter by placing her into a rubbish chute: the defendant was affected by ‘post-partum psychosis’.
  • Various (separate) cases of defendants charged with the murder of infants and young children, or with causing or allowing the death of young children.
  • A woman convicted (with her partner) of gross negligence manslaughter when their infant child drowned in a bath, having been left unattended.
  • One of two defendants acquitted of murder on the Judge’s direction following argument on causation where there had been delayed death following assault and brain injury.
  • One of eight defendants acquitted of charges of murder, in relation to an incident when 3 men were struck by a car (during the riots in Birmingham in 2011).
  • A defendant charged with the murder of 3 men in the 1990’s, unfit to be tried in the normal way therefore trial of whether he ‘did the acts’.
  • One of three defendants charged with the (financially motivated) murder of an elderly disabled man in his own home.
  • Several (separate cases) of alleged ‘contract’ or ‘execution’ murders (shootings).
  • A man who lured a taxi driver to a country lane, then stabbed and killed him during a bungled attempted robbery.
  • A defendant who killed an elderly couple in their own home.
  • A 19 year old defendant charged with the murder of a shopkeeper during the course of a robbery.
  • A defendant who murdered his elderly aunt and uncle.
  • A woman who killed her 6 year old daughter (manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility), including successful appeal against sentence of IPP.
  • Murder of several victims by setting fire to a hotel.
  • An 18 year old defendant charged with murdering his mother, a case with complex psychiatric issues.
  • A middle-aged woman charged with the murder of her elderly mother-in-law.

Prosecution:

  • Two separate cases of serving prisoners (life sentence for murder) who murdered another inmate.
  • A man who strangled and murdered his wife and attempted to murder his two young children.
  • Murder, a shooting inside a Black Country nightclub.
  • A man who stabbed and killed his partner in full view of their two young children, during an acute psychotic episode of his established mental illness.
  • 5 defendants, murder (petrol thrown and ignited), conspiracy to murder and perverting the course of justice.
  • A defendant who murdered his adult daughter by strangulation.
  • A serving police officer who murdered his partner.
  • A defendant who killed his infant son.
  • A man who murdered a young woman in her own home.

Podcasts

Videos

Further Information

No Photos

Downloads

Witness Familiarisation Support And Courses

These are a few examples of courses in which our members have been involved:

  • Witness familiarisation with trainee police officers and special constables from Northamptonshire Police, where the officers were questioned regarding their statements about ‘mock’ arrest exercises
  • Similar exercises with detectives from the West Midlands Police
  • Witness familiarisation with officers of the Northamptonshire Probation Service.  These officers were given training on the process of giving evidence in sentencing hearings in the Magistrates Court and Crown Court
  • Expert witness familiarisation and training, with expert witnesses such as independent Forensic Scientists, and officers of the Health and Safety Executive. The exercises involved questioning regarding expert reports prepared by the participants

Equal Opportunity Policy

 

Citadel’s members come from a range of backgrounds and everyone is treated with the same respect as part of our Chamber’s community. 

 

We operate an equal opportunity policy and act in accordance with the Bar Code of Conduct and the Equality Code for the Bar.

 

We seek to prevent direct or indirect discrimination towards our clients, staff, tenants and pupils, on the grounds of race, colour, ethnic or national origin, nationality or citizenship, political persuasion, religion, gender, sexual orientation, marital status, disability or age.

Maternity / Paternity Policy

We support all members  who  are fortunate enough to become parents.   Whilst Citadel has written policies dealing with issues of maternity and paternity leave for members of Chambers and support staff, we also try to be flexible in our approach and to accommodate individual needs.

Uniquely (to our knowledge) we offer direct financial support to members returning from parental leave in order to cushion the cash flow impact of return to practice . 

Click here to listen to a podcast about our members with children and how we deal with childcare issues.