Following meetings with legal professionals working in the public and private sectors on Monday 16 September, the Attorney General thanked them for their work, particularly after their essential work tackling the recent disorder, and highlighted future employment opportunities in the region.

On his first official visit to the Crown Prosecution Service North-West Area, he met with the Chief Crown Prosecutor Suzanne Llwellyn and senior staff to discuss their work delivering justice.

The Attorney General chaired a roundtable with Manchester legal firms to talk up the potential of the local legal market, and the opportunities created by the relocation of government staff to the region in 2023.   

During the visit, the Attorney General met with Government Legal Department and HMRC staff based in Salford. The Government Legal Department’s office moved to the New Bailey in Salford, employing 114 Government lawyers and civil servants and complements existing offices in Bristol, Leeds, and London.

Further engagements were held with the University of Manchester’s Justice Hub, which provides legal advice to the general public and a dinner with the Northern Circuit, attended by a cross-section of barristers from different practices throughout the region.  

The Attorney General said: 

The North-west has a thriving legal community, with opportunities for aspiring and newly qualified lawyers and barristers to kick start their careers, as well as opportunities for established lawyers for further development.

I was proud to pay tribute in person to lawyers working in the Government Legal Department and CPS, here in Manchester, who are often prosecutors working hard to secure convictions against serious offenders or government lawyers who work on some of the most complex cases upholding the rule of law.

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