Patricia Marsh
Allegation / charges
Criminal Convictions
Findings — machine-extracted (anthropic-batch:claude-opus-4-8); verify against the decision
Patricia Marsh, an unqualified solicitor's clerk, was convicted on her own confession of impeding the apprehension of an offender and assisting an escaped prisoner after helping two prisoner defendants escape custody following a Strangeways riot trial. The Tribunal found the allegation substantiated (uncontested) and made a Section 43 order restricting her employment by solicitors. She was ordered to pay costs of £398.20, though the Tribunal noted her impecuniosity. The respondent did not appear; her solicitors stated she did not wish to work for solicitors and was studying. No express finding of dishonesty was made by the Tribunal itself, though the underlying conviction was characterised as disclosing dishonesty for the Law Society's purposes.
Duties found breached:
Mitigating factors:
- Respondent did not contest the facts
- Respondent no longer wished to be employed by solicitors and was undertaking a period of study
- Respondent's impecuniosity acknowledged by the Tribunal