King's Counsel is a cartoon satire on law and lawyers appearing in the law pages of The Times - Browse the archive for over 1,000 law cartoons, law jokes, lawyer jokes and law humour going back over twenty years. - Read more...
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Dissolute Associates
19 October 2013
Sometimes at big law firms it is not so much survival of the fittest as survival of the piss-artist...
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The Best 16 Queen's Counsel cartoons ever - at legalcheek.com
10 October 2013
Legalcheek.com has run a piece today on the best 16 QC cartoons ever. But in truth it's hard to pick the top 10, or the top 16, or even the top 50...
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What Do Partners Do All Day?
10 October 2013
Actually, today's cartoon is probably a little unfair. Most partners at law firms work their bums off...
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The passage of time...
03 October 2013
Unlike the Alex cartoon in the Daily Telegraph, my characters have never grown up...
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Happy Birthday Queen's Counsel!
03 October 2013
Queen's Counsel was born exactly 20 years ago, first published in The Times on 3 October 1993...
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20 Years of Queen's Counsel - and a new book!
29 September 2013
Queen's Counsel will be 20 years old on Thursday. The first strip ran on October 3, 1993...
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Should Niqabs be allowed in court?
26 September 2013
Should witnesss be allowed to wear a Niqab in Court? Or a Burqa? And what's the difference, anyway?
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Office Joys
20 September 2013
Want to work from home? Be your own boss? Heaven! Or not. Welcome to your newest problem...
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Handling Clients
14 September 2013
What do lawyers tell their clients? The truth, of course. The whole, ugly, unvarnished truth...
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Back to School
08 September 2013
September is time to go back to school, and time to try out all those brilliant ideas that came to you...
More about King's Counsel
Meet Sir Geoffrey Bentwood KC, who specializes in putting judges and juries to sleep while not-so-secretly longing to be promoted to the bench. His sidekick Edward Longwind takes lessons in pomposity from Sir Geoffrey. Meanwhile, Richard Loophole of Loophole and Fillibuster does his best to bankrupt his clients, whilst working his associates to death and pretending to remember some of the law he learned at school. At the mercy of all of them is the luckless Mr Sprocket, the endlessly unsuccessful litigant whose lawyers will not rest until they have spent all of his money.