Phillippa took silk in 2011. She is identified in three practice areas by Chambers & Partners (2013) (administrative and public law; civil liberties and police law) where it is said that she has been earmarked as "the leading silk of the next generation." Senior solicitors, and their counterparts at the Bar, confirm that Kaufmann is a "really remarkable”, "brilliant and hugely creative” practitioner who is “a real joy to work with” and is “sensational both before and during a trial.”
Phillippa's expertise spans the public and private law arenas. She is equally at home in complex trials requiring mastery of large volumes of evidence and skilled cross examination as before the Administrative Court, Court of Appeal or Supreme Court arguing novel and difficult points of law.
Phillippa has an extensive public law practice representing a broad range of individual applicants. She also acts for NGOs such as Reprieve and Campaign Against the Arms Trade. She is described in Chambers and Partners (2012) as "a true public law all-rounder," who "can turn her hand to many matters".
Phillippa has extensive experience both of inquests and bringing challenges to coronial decisions by way of judicial review.
Phillippa has an extensive international law practice in the field of human rights. She is currently representing the claimants in the "Mau Mau" litigation against the Foreign and Commonwealth Office arising out of the systematic torture of suspected insurgents in the Kenyan uprising in the 1950s, as well as over 800 Iraqis bringing private law damages claims both under the Human Rights Act and for assault and false imprisonment following their internment in the aftermath of the Iraq war. Other recent or ongoing cases include:
It was through her prisoners' rights practice that Phillippa first branched out into media law. She has represented many prisoners seeking access to the media, including the appellants in the seminal House of Lords case Simms and O'Brien and in 2012, Babar Ahmad in the successful judicial review brought by the BBC in which exceptionally the Divisional Court held that a refusal to allow an interview for broadcast purposes was contrary to Article 10 ECHR. She has been involved in securing injunctive protection on behalf of a number of individuals convicted of notorious crimes whose life or mental well being was put under threat by the glare of publicity. She represented Mary Bell and Maxine Carr when they secured lifelong contra mundum injunctions preventing the publication of any information liable to lead to the disclosure of their new identities. More recently she acted for Jon Venables in relation to the continued operation of the contra-mundum injunction secured on his release on licence in 2001, following his further prosecution in 2010.
Phillippa began specialising in prisoner's rights in the early 1990s when this was a little known area of law. She was involved in most of the leading House of Lords cases extending the scope of prisoners' rights, particularly the rights of indeterminate sentence prisoners. She undertakes all aspects of prison law, be they Parole Board hearings, where she has recently represented Learco Chimdamo in relation to his recall to prison, or complex judicial reviews. Recent cases include:-
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