Practice Overview
Originally from Mid-Glamorgan, Tracey gained an LL.B.(Hons.) from the University of Buckingham and was called to the Bar in 1988. Having practised on the London and South-Eastern Circuit and on the Midlands Circuit, she returned home to join the criminal team at Thirty Park Place in 2005.
Tracey practices exclusively in crime dealing with the full range of criminal offences. She also undertakes regulatory work.
Tracey regularly gives talks at legal seminars. She is an advocacy tutor and an accredited pupil supervisor. Tracey is a member of the Criminal Bar Association. She is a Grade 4 CPS advocate and a VHCC panel advocate. Tracey was appointed as a Recorder of the Crown Court in 2009.
Recommendations
“Tracey Lloyd-Nesling is a heavyweight junior in very serious crime”
(Legal 500 2010)
Appointments
Memberships
Education
Notable and Reported Cases
Reported Cases.
- Jones v Chief Constable of West Mercia [2000] All ER (D) 1344.
- R v Pollard [2005] All ER (D) 320.
- R v Mouncher and Others : instructed for Defence in the largest police corruption trial in British legal history. Prosecution offered no evidence as a result of disclosure problems revealed following Defence legal submissions.
- R v T. Murder/manslaughter by young offender while on bail for s18 GBH.
- R v Cole and others. Two conspiracies to demand large sums of money with menaces using a firearm. One Co-Defendant was a serving South Wales Police firearms officer who gave evidence for the Crown following his guilty plea.
- R v N. RAF officer committed serious sexual offences against teenage cadets. One cadet committed suicide before trial. Complex legal issues including hearsay evidence of bad character and multiple hearsay.
- R v Al-Sulaiti. Bogus asylum seeker defrauded state of large sums. Involved detailed analysis of financial documents from Qatar.
- R v M and C. Sadistic child cruelty. Trial in absence of one Defendant.
- R v L (A). 17 year old Defendant accused of multiple rapes at knifepoint.
- R v Leqeti. Appeal against conviction for rape allowed due to fresh evidence and retrial ordered. First re-trial abandoned due to problems with interpreter and abuse of process argument resulted. Convicted at second retrial. One Prosecution witness then prosecuted for perjury and abuse of process argument failed on appeal (R v Gripton.)
- R v Ullah. Kidnapping by teenagers who poured petrol over victim and threatened to set him alight.