Barrister & one of Britain's first
black female Recorders
Constance Briscoe LL.B, MA (born 18 May 1957) is a barrister and one of Britain's first black female Recorders.
Born to two Jamaicans who settled in the United Kingdom in the 1950s, she was one of six children.
Briscoe studied Law at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, financing her studies by having several jobs at weekends and during the holidays, including working with the terminally ill in a hospice. She took an MA at the University of Warwick.
She was called to the Bar in 1983, and in 1996 became a Recorder, a part time judge - one of the first black women to sit as a judge in the UK. Briscoe's legal practice focuses on criminal law and fraud, principally defending. She also undertakes tribunal work, public inquiries, inquests and acts as President of Mental Health Tribunals.
In the late 1990s, Briscoe was unsuccessfully nominated for a peerage. In 2007 she applied to be made a QC but was turned down.
She is known for her books Ugly and Beyond Ugly in which she claims she was abused as a child and she often talks about her
experiences publicly. Her mother, Carmen Briscoe-Mitchell, sued her daughter along with publishers Hodder & Stoughton for libel. The case was concluded in Briscoe's favour, when a civil jury in the High Court unanimously found that the books were not libellous.