NSW Senior Counsel Appointments

Prior to 1993 silks were referred to as QC or KC (KC from 1901-1952) depending on the reigning sovereign - they commenced being referred to as SC on and from 1993. Please note that formal titles and/or post nominals that may have been held by an individual on their appointment as a silk have been omitted.

Note: An individual is not listed here if it is know he/she was appointed silk in another jurisdiction prior to taking silk status in NSW where this is known.

Name Date of appointment External links
Sibtain, Dauid 5 October 2022
Newton, Guy 5 October 2022
Beckett, Simeon 5 October 2022
Rayment, David 5 October 2022
Hewitt, Justin 5 October 2022
Neild, Bill 5 October 2022
Jones, Bradley 5 October 2022
Cooke, Julian 5 October 2022
Mathur, Ragni 5 October 2022
Stares, Kellie 5 October 2022
Bender, Nicholas 5 October 2022
Colquhoun, Charles 5 October 2022
Beaumont, Justine 5 October 2022
Bishop, Elizabeth 5 October 2022
Robertson, Scott 5 October 2022
Kay Hoyle, Johnathan 5 October 2022
Knowles, Patrick 5 October 2022
Edwards, Troy 5 October 2022
Barnett, Martha 5 October 2022
Hutton, James 5 October 2022
O’Keefe, Richard 6 October 2023
Dura, David 6 October 2023
Djemal, Avni 6 October 2023
Meehan, Simon 6 October 2023
Seymour, Mark 6 October 2023
Docker, Sean 6 October 2023
Gerace, Maria 6 October 2023
Eastman, Nicholas 6 October 2023
Kremer, Benjamin 6 October 2023
Mahony, Gillian 6 October 2023
Darams, Jamie 6 October 2023
Ng, Gerald 6 October 2023
Cook, Angela 6 October 2023
Edwards, Kirsten 6 October 2023
El-Hage, Henry 6 October 2023
Roche, Declan 6 October 2023
Barrow, David 6 October 2023
Gleeson, Catherine 6 October 2023
Ahmed, Imtiaz 6 October 2023
Dwyer, Peggy 6 October 2023
Hatfield, Brett 6 October 2023
Chapple, Simon 6 October 2023
Yezerski, Robert 6 October 2023
Roughley, Fiona 6 October 2023
Scully, David 6 October 2023

Note for interest

William Charles Wentworth, admitted in 1824 with Robert Wardell as foundation barristers in the Supreme Court of New South Wales, was accorded the distinction of wearing a silk gown in February 1835 - the first in private practice to be so recognised (Sydney Gazette, 12 February 1835). That was a 'patent of precedence' but did not entitle him to use the term 'King's Counsel'. Senior law officers customarily wore silk gowns in court in the early decades of the Supreme Court.