Robert Tolhurst

Year of Call: 1992

CPS Grade: 3
 

 

Continuing Professional Development

Bar Council Vulnerable Witness Training & Midland Circuit RASSO training

Areas Of Specialism

Financial crime, Homicide, Serious Violence, Drug Trafficking, Serious Sexual Offences.

Career overview

Prior to joining Citadel in 2019, Robert was employed for 9 years by a leading City of London white collar crime firm, as in-house counsel where his practice was focused on defending complex financial crime. Since his return to the independent criminal Bar, whilst maintaining a focus on his white-collar experience, his practice has expanded to include a wide spectrum of serious and complex criminal work. He is regularly instructed as leading, led and sole counsel, defending both private and publicly funded clients charged with the full calendar of criminal offences. Robert is also a Grade 3 Prosecutor.

Practice Summary

Robert is a specialist criminal practitioner. He started practice in London prosecuting and defending the broad spectrum of criminal work before taking up a position in 2010 as in-house counsel in a leading London White Collar firm of Solicitors defending complex financial crime.
Robert returned to the independent criminal Bar at Citadel Chambers in 2019.

Details of practice

Financial Crime
  • R v R: Represented a defendant charged with 3 counts of fraud relating to the ownership of a Leonardo Da Vinci painting.
  • Operation V: Represented 1 of 5 defendants charged with money laundering following the seizure of in excess of £3 million in cash as a result of an Encrochat investigation by the National Crime Agency.
  • Providing pre-charge advice to private clients in unrelated, high profile, multi-jurisdictional investigations into global bribery and corruption and a complex cross-border European tax-evasion scheme.
  • R v W: Represented 1 of 8 defendants charged with conspiracy to launder in excess of £150 million, the proceeds of drug trafficking. The allegation concerned the abuse of multiple third-party bank accounts by a Chinese organised crime group.
  • Operation J: Represented a defendant on an indictment with 7 others charged with a multi-million pound MTIC fraud revolving around the trade in waste precious metals.
  • Operation R: Represented a defendant charged with a multi-million pound mobile phone fraud involving an organised crime group systematically defrauding the major mobile phone networks.
  • Operation B: Represented a defendant charged with a multi-million pound phishing fraud and money laundering. The investigation was a joint operation between the Metropolitan police, Police Scotland and the National Crime Agency. The case involved the deliberate targeting of small businesses lacking sophisticated security measures, utilising highly sophisticated mobile phone software to deceive the businesses into believing that the caller was a genuine bank employee notifying them of fraud.
  • R v D: Represented one of a number of defendants charged with conspiracy to defraud involving the systematic defrauding of customers of two motor vehicle engine re-manufacturing companies, set up as vehicles for fraud.
  • Operation S: Represented one of a number of defendants in an organised crime group charged with conspiracy to defraud in relation to a land banking boiler room fraud.
  • Operation P: Represented one of a number of defendants in an organised crime group charged with conspiracy to defraud in relation to a carbon credit boiler room fraud.
  • R v S: Represented a defendant charged in a private prosecution with 13 counts of historic money transfer offences totalling in excess of £20 million. This case was described at the time as being the largest ever private prosecution brought to trial.
  • R v F: represented a defendant charged with 2 others on a 20 count indictment alleging offences of money laundering, fraudulent trading, false accounting and offences under the Company Directors Disqualification Act.
  • R v R: Represented a defendant charged with offences under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. The case concerned allegations of providing financial advice to high net-worth individuals whilst not being authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority.

    Homicide
  • Operation E: Represented 1 of 5 youths charged with the joint enterprise murder of an unrelated, unknown member of the public who was stabbed following a chance encounter and confrontation.
  • R v H: Represented a defendant charged on an indictment alleging Manslaughter and 4 counts of child neglect. The case involved successful legal submissions in relation to the very existence of a species of involuntary manslaughter not recognised by the Court of Appeal since 1961. Those submissions resulted in the successful dismissal of that allegation.
  • Operation S: Represented a vulnerable defendant charged with conspiracy to commit murder. The case involved a group attack upon an individual resulting in stab wounds to the head. The defendant was acquitted of all charges.
  • Operation M: Represented a defendant acquitted of murder. The deceased was shot in a crowded night club in a drug related turf war. The defendant had been named by an eye-witness, but the case turned upon the close examination of hundreds of hours of closed circuit television footage and undermining complex cell site and ballistics evidence.
  • Operation A: Advised and represented a client on appeal against a conviction for murder. This appeal concerned multiple strands of fresh evidence including alleged confessions made by a co-defendant, a witness anonymity order and the digital reconstruction of the scene based upon the principal eye witness’ evidence at trial.
  • Operation L: Represented 1 of 3 defendants charged with murder arising out of a classic joint enterprise stabbing. The defendant was acquitted.
  • Operation F: Represented 1 of 3 defendants charged with the murder of a victim whilst he was asleep in bed next to his partner, at the hands of a group of males armed with machetes. The evidence comprised a complex matrix of circumstantial evidence which included a vast quantity of call data, cell site evidence, low copy mixed profile DNA and complex bad character issues relating to a multitude of suspects not charged. All 3 defendants were acquitted.

    Firearms and Serious Violence
  • R v B: Represented the first of 4 defendants charged with conspiracy to sell or transfer prohibited firearms and ammunition, possession of a prohibited firearm and ammunition and possession of articles for use in the conversion of firearms. The case concerned allegations that the defendant was supplying converted firearms and manufactured ammunition to criminal networks.
  • R v M: Represented 1 of 5 defendants charged with possession of a prohibited weapon, ammunition and a firearm with intent to endanger life.
  • R v S: Represented 1 of 7 defendants charged with prison mutiny following a serious, violent disturbance at HMP Stocken in January 2020.
  • R v C: Represented a vulnerable defendant charged with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, in circumstances where the victim who was related to the defendant had been eviscerated in the attack upon him.
  • R v C: Represented a defendant charged with violent disorder and wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm relating to serious disorder and stabbing in a nightclub.
  • T v F: Instructed to represent 1 of 9 defendants charged with violent disorder arising out of disturbances in the vicinity of Wembley Stadium prior to the European Championship final in July 2021.
  • Operation K: Represented the first defendant on an indictment charging conspiracy to cause explosions. The case concerned the construction, delivery and detonation of pipe bombs at a series of residential addresses, arising out of a feud between former business partners. The evidence included an alleged prison cell confession, covert recordings of defendant’s conversations with friends and family on prison visits, a vast quantity of call data, cell site analysis, hundreds of hours of closed circuit TV footage and expert imagery enhancement.
  • R v S: Represented a defendant charged with arson with intent to endanger life and doing acts tended and intending to pervert the course of justice. The case concerned a fire at a substantial retail outlet, causing significant damage. The defendant was a former employee who was extremely vulnerable. He was previously undiagnosed as being on the Autism spectrum and was acquitted on all counts following the instruction of a dual qualified Clinical and Forensic Psychologist.

Drug Trafficking
  • Operation S: Instructed to prosecute this county lines drug trafficking investigation carried out by the West Midlands Regional Organised Crime Unit. The case concerned a proactive investigation into the trafficking of class A drugs from Birmingham for distribution in an urban conurbation located in Devon.
  • Operation A: Represented a defendant charged as a member of an organised crime group with conspiracy to cultivate and supply cannabis on an industrial scale. The investigation spanned a 5 year period and involved a covert surveillance operation.
  • Operation B: represented of a number of defendants charged with a multi-million pound conspiracy to supply class A and B drugs and money laundering. The defendant was a vulnerable person and was twice severed from the trials of co-defendants. The evidence included extensive intrusive surveillance and generated hundreds of hours of covert audio recordings. The trial gave rise to issues arising out of the execution of unlawful search warrants resulting in application by the Crown under section 59 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 2001 to retain evidence which had been unlawfully seized in order to prosecute this defendant.
  • Represented a defendant alleged to be the head of an organised crime group running a conspiracy to supply Class A drugs across a major urban conurbation. The investigation involved a 7 month covert operation involving intrusive surveillance and the generation of hundreds of hours of audio transcripts said to evidence the conspirators actively engaged in the supply of class A drugs.
  • Operation V: Represented 1 of 8 defendants charged with conspiracy to supply crack cocaine and heroin. The case involved an organised crime group orchestrated by the first defendant from his prison cell. The case involved evidence of gang affiliation, county lines dealing and a turf war between competing rival gangs concerned with the supply of class A drugs.

Serious Sexual Offences
  • R v B: Instructed to represent a defendant charged with three counts of historic allegations of rape of a child.
  • R v L: Represented a defendant charged together on an indictment with a former partner of a series of historic sexual offences and child cruelty in relation to 2 children of his partner.
  • R v B: Represented a defendant acquitted of two counts of rape made by independent complainants.
  • R v O: Represented a defendant acquitted of two counts of rape made by independent complainants.
  • R v NB: Represented a defendant charged with assault by penetration, grievous bodily harm with intent and controlling and coercive behaviour. The allegations arose out of an extremely volatile relationship and the defendant had been convicted of similar offences against previous partners which were admitted as evidence of his bad character. Acquitted of the assault and GBH offences.
  • R v C: Represented an extremely vulnerable 24 year old defendant charged in relation to two separate sets of allegations comprising 15 offences from different geographical locations 4 years apart. The allegations involved causing or inciting a child under the age of 13 to engage in sexual activity. The Court was persuaded on the complex expert evidence placed before it that the defendant was not a dangerous offender.

Other Notable Cases
  • Represented a defendant acquitted of attempting to pervert the course of justice in a trial where his father and uncle were charged with the murder of his aunt and uncle in an honour killing.
  • Represented a defendant charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice as part of an organised crime group. The allegation concerned the dissipation of restrained funds through bank accounts opened specifically to defeat the restraint orders imposed upon suspects in an ongoing ‘cash for crash’ fraud investigation.

Podcasts

Photos

videos

Further Information

Memberships
  • Criminal Bar Association
  • International Bar Association
  • Birmingham Law Society
  • Fraud Lawyers Association

Robert is very proud to have been, for 5 years, Chair of Governors at an Ofsted ‘Outstanding’ all-through Academy situated at the heart of one of the most ethnically diverse and socio-economically challenged communities in the country.

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.