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Topic: Gareth Peirce

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Gareth Peirce (born c. 1940) is an English solicitor, and was educated at the independent Cheltenham Ladies' College, the University of Oxford and the London School of Economics. She discarded her birth name of "Jean" when she was quite young, taking "Gareth" as her legal name. She is noted for taking on controversial cases, including high profile human rights issues. Her clients include the Birmingham Six, the Tipton Three, the Guildford Four, former MI5 operative David Shayler, Abu Qatada (who has been called 'Europe's Al-Qaeda Ambassador'), Judith Ward, Mouloud Sihali, the family of Jean Charles de Menezes, Mozzam Begg and Bisher Amin Khalil al-Rawi, a detainee at the Guantanamo Bay detainment camp.

In the mid 1970's Gareth Peirce supported specific campaigns for reform of laws and police procedures that permitted the prosecution and conviction of persons solely on identification evidence. Individual cases that were then very much in the news - such as the George Davis Is Innocent Campaign alongside numerous others countrywide soon led to the establishment of Justice Against the Identification Laws (J.A.I.L.), an organisation which Gareth Peirce supported. (See: "IDENTIFICATION EVIDENCE - Practices and Malpractices: A report by JAIL" by Martin Walker and Bernadette Brittain. (1978)).

In the 1960s, she worked as a journalist in the United States, following the campaign of Martin Luther King; when she returned to Britain in the 1970s, after having married Bill Peirce, the son of the American painter Waldo Peirce, she took a postgraduate law degree at the London School of Economics. She joined the firm of the radical solicitor Benedict Birnberg as a trainee, and was admitted to the Roll of Solicitors on December 15, 1978.

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